From the July 2015 issue

Sirius, our brightest star, is orbited by a white dwarf — a dead star’s core. Where is the planetary nebula that would have formed when it shed its skin?

Mark Socha, Saginaw, Minnesota
By | Published: July 27, 2015 | Last updated on May 18, 2023
The constellation Canis Major, the Large Dog, is home to the night's brightest star, Sirius.
The constellation Canis Major, the Large Dog, is home to the night’s brightest star, Sirius (right). The constellation also hosts the open cluster M41 (left).
José Carlos Diniz
The white dwarf Sirius B probably would have had a planetary nebula around it at one point, long ago. The planetary nebula phase of stellar evolution is a short-lived phenomenon, astronomically speaking, generally lasting only about 50,000 years. Sirius B is estimated to be over 100 million years old, so any planetary nebula it might have had is long gone.

After a low-mass star (lower than 8 solar masses or so) evolves past the hydrogen-burning main sequence phase of its lifetime, it goes through several other phases, such as the red giant phase and the asymptotic giant branch phase. Eventually, the outer layers are shed in a slow wind, and the hot core of the star is exposed. This hot central core, in the process of becoming a white dwarf, has temperatures of around 100,000 kelvins. This is hot enough to emit a lot of ultraviolet radiation, which ionizes the blown-off material, causing it to glow and become a planetary nebula.

There are two factors that cause this phase to be short-lived. One is simply that the material blown off the star continues to drift away and eventually dissipates into the interstellar medium. Additionally, as the central star cools and becomes a white dwarf, its luminosity drops to the point where it would be inefficient in ionizing the gas, even if it were present.

Brian Williams
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
Greenbelt, Maryland