Accretion Disk Binary System
			
		
		
			Credit:
		
		
			Our 
Sun is unusual in that it is alone - most 
stars occur in multiple or 
binary systems.  In a binary system, the 
higher mass star will evolve faster and will eventually
become a compact object - either a 
white dwarf star, a 
neutron star, or
black hole. When the lower mass star later 
evolves into an expansion phase, it may be so close to the compact star
that its outer atmosphere actually falls onto the compact star.  Such is
the case 
diagrammed 
above.  Here 
gas from a blue giant star is 
shown being stripped away into an accretion disk around its compact binary
companion. Gas in the accretion disk swirls around, heats up, and
eventually falls onto the compact star.  Extreme conditions frequently
occur on the surface of the compact star as gas falls in, many times
causing detectable 
X-rays, 
gamma-rays, or even 
cataclysmic novae explosions. Studying the extreme conditions in these
systems tells us about the inner properties of ordinary matter around us.