It was a day like any other for a nearby star named GJ 3685A - until it suddenly exploded with light. At 2 p.m. Pacific time on April 24, 2004, the detectors on the Galaxy Evolution Explorer ultraviolet space telescope nearly overloaded when the star abruptly brightened by a factor of at least 10,000. After the excitement was over, astronomers realized that they had just recorded a giant star eruption, or flare, about one million times more energetic than those from our Sun.
Findings on this intriguing event were presented today at the 206th meeting of the American Astronomical Society in Minneapolis, US. This dramatic flare is just one of many serendipitous discoveries made by the Galaxy Evolution Explorer since its 2003 launch.
Though the telescope was originally designed to spot galaxies, it has repeatedly witnessed a sky flickering with ultraviolet flares, bursts and fast-moving streaks. While the flares and bursts are from different types of stars, the streaks are asteroids, satellites or possibly space debris floating across the telescope's field of view.
The findings have led astronomers to conclude that the ultraviolet sky, once thought to be a quiet backdrop for viewing galaxies, is, in fact, a rather festive place.
"We had no idea that the ultraviolet sky would be filled with so many things that go bump in the night. All of these objects are a bonus to astronomers, since the observations come free when the telescope is aimed at distant galaxies." - Dr. Barry Welsh, University of California, Berkeley, co-discoverer of some of the flares.
"I was surprised by how often we have observed stellar flares and by the amazing size of some of them. Nature rarely disappoints us," - Dr. Chris Martin, principal investigator of the Galaxy Evolution Explorer, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena.
So far, the Galaxy Evolution Explorer has recorded 84 bonus astrophysical events occurring on flaring stars, binary stars called dwarf novae, and pulsating stars, as well as countless pieces of space debris. These data are already being collected into public databases for other astronomers to study. For example, astronomers are using the new set of flare stars to test their flare theories.
The Galaxy Evolution Explorer is surveying the entire sky at ultraviolet wavelengths for clues to how the earliest galaxies evolved into mature galaxies like our own Milky Way. To detect these early, faint galaxies, the telescope was outfitted with specialized cameras that allow the arrival of each photon of ultraviolet light to be timed with a precision of about a microsecond.
"The telescope's detectors have provided an unprecedented time resolution of these astrophysical events. Now, we can say what happens during each one-hundredth of a second of a flare event. That's better information than most video cameras have when they take slow motion shots of athletes." - Dr. Barry Welsh
A preliminary analysis of the enormous flare witnessed by the Galaxy Evolution Explorer around GJ 3685A - the largest ever recorded in ultraviolet light - shows that the mechanisms underlying these stellar eruptions may be more complex than previously believed. Evidence for the two most popular flare theories was found.
Flares are huge explosions of energy stemming from a single location on a star's surface. They happen regularly on many types of stars, though old, small "red dwarf" stars like GJ 3685A tend to experience them most frequently and dramatically. These stars, called flare stars, can erupt as often as every few hours, and with an intensity far greater than flares from our Sun. One of the reasons astronomers study flare stars is to gain a better picture and history of flare events taking place on the Sun.