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Space-warping white dwarfs produce gravitational waves

Scientists first detected ripples in the fabric of space-time by using radio signals, but now a team of astronomers has detected the same effect at optical wavelengths.
By Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Cambridge, Massachusetts Published: August 28, 2012
White-dwarfs
An artist's conception of J0651 with ripples to demonstrate how the white dwarf pair is emitting gravitational waves. // Image credit: NASA
Gravitational waves, much like the recently discovered Higgs boson, are notoriously difficult to observe. Scientists first detected these ripples in the fabric of space-time indirectly, using radio signals from a pulsar-neutron star binary system. The find, which required exquisitely accurate timing of the radio signals, garnered its discoverers a Nobel Prize. Now a team of astronomers has detected the same effect at optical wavelengths, in light from a pair of eclipsing white dwarf stars.

"This result marks one of the cleanest and strongest detections of the effect of gravitational waves," said Warren Brown of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory (SAO).

The team discovered the white dwarf pair last year — white dwarfs are the remnant cores of stars like our Sun. The system, called SDSS J065133.338+284423.37 (J0651 for short), contains two white dwarf stars so close together — one-third of the Earth-Moon distance — that they make a complete orbit in less than 13 minutes.

"Every six minutes, the stars in J0651 eclipse each other as seen from Earth, which makes for an unparalleled and accurate clock some 3,000 light-years away," said J.J. Hermes of the University of Texas at Austin.

Einstein's general theory of relativity predicts that moving objects create subtle ripples in the fabric of space-time, called gravitational waves. Gravitational waves should carry away energy, causing the stars to inch closer together and orbit each other faster and faster. The team was able to detect this effect in J0651.

"Compared to April 2011 when we discovered this object, the eclipses now happen six seconds sooner than expected," said Mukremin Kilic from the University of Oklahoma.

"This is a general relativistic effect you could measure with a wrist watch," said SAO's Warren Brown.

J0651 will provide an opportunity to compare future direct, space-based detection of gravitational waves with those inferred from the orbital decay, providing important benchmark tests of our understanding of the workings of gravity.

The team expects that the period will shrink more and more each year, with eclipses happening more than 20 seconds sooner than otherwise expected by May 2013. The stars will eventually merge in 2 million years. Future observations will continue to measure the orbital decay of this system as scientists attempt to understand how tides affect the merger of such stars.

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4 stars
RICHARD MCCONNELL from UNITED KINGDOM said:
In answer to Robert McCabe: in two bodies so close together they will both keep the same face towards each other (like Pluto and Charon) so tidal braking is effectively zero.
4 stars
GERARDO W FISCHER from ARGENTINA said:
For me it is a question whether gravitational effects expand just with light velocity or almost infinite speed. There is the famous imaginary model of the lighthouse: At enough distance you see that the light signal cannot maintain the angular speed of the originating light as it won't travel faster than light can. So in great distance there is just a spiral of signals. Attention should be given to the time intervals of optical superposition and gravitational oscillation.
KENNETH KLEBS from FLORIDA said:
Neutron stars usually spin at a high rate. If there are any tidal effects it would cause the stars to move farther apart. The moon is actually moving farther from the earth because of tidal effects.
3 stars
RICHARD L COLE from MICHIGAN said:
Interesting. However, the article is ambiguous on whether the six seconds reference is to the period or to the cumulative reduction over some 85,000 orbits, i.e. a few microseconds per period.
4 stars
STEPHEN ARMSTRONG from CALIFORNIA said:
White dwarves are so-much-more-than-rock-solid that they cannot BE subject to tidal friction effects, which transfer surface energies towards the cores of rotating objects.
3 stars
ROBERT MCCABE from NORTH CAROLINA said:
"Gravitational waves should carry away energy, causing the stars to inch closer together and orbit each other faster and faster."

Doesn't tidal friction do the same thing? So how do they know it's gravity waves?
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