X-Rays From Sirius B
In visible light
Sirius A
(Alpha Canis Majoris) is the
brightest
star in the night sky, a closely watched celestial beacon throughout
recorded
history.
Part of a
binary star system only 8 light-years away,
it was known in modern times to have a small
companion star,
Sirius B.
Sirius B is much dimmer and
appears so close to the brilliant Sirius A
that it was not
actually
sighted until 1862,
during Alvan Clark's testing
of a large, well made optical
refracting telescope.
For orbiting x-ray telescopes, the
Sirius situation is exactly
reversed, though.
A smaller but hotter Sirius B appears as the overwhelmingly
intense x-ray source in this Chandra Observatory
x-ray
image (lines radiating from Sirius B are image artifacts).
The fainter source seen at the position of Sirius A
may be largely due to ultraviolet light from the star leaking
into the x-ray detector.
With a surface temperature of 25,000
kelvins,
the mass of the Sun, and a radius just less than Earth's, Sirius B
is the closest known
white dwarf star.
Can you guess what makes
Sirius B like
Neptune,
the Sun's most distant gas giant planet?
While still unseen, the presence of both celestial
bodies was detected based on their gravitational
influence alone ... making them early examples of
dark
matter.