Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Space
  3. News

Hubble measures the mass of a lonely dead star for the first time

Add as a preferred source on Google

In billions of years’ time, after our sun has burned through all of its fuel and puffed up to be a red giant, it will eventually shrink and cool until all that remains is the dense core of the former star, called a white dwarf. This is what will eventually happen to most stars, so white dwarfs are common in the universe. But there is much we still have to learn about these core remnants, and recent research using the Hubble Space Telescope has measured the mass of a lone white dwarf for the first time.

Previously, the mass of white dwarfs was measured when they were a part of a binary. When two stars orbit each other, astronomers can figure out their masses. However, there are also many single white dwarfs out there and it was difficult to work out their mass.

A single bright blue star dominates the scene against a dark background with many small stars visible in the distance.
Hubble has used microlensing to measure the mass of a white dwarf star. The dwarf, called LAWD 37, is a burned-out star in the center of this NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image. Though its nuclear fusion furnace has shut down, trapped heat is sizzling on the surface at roughly 100 000 degrees Celsius, causing the stellar remnant to glow fiercely. NASA, ESA, P. McGill (Univ. of California, Santa Cruz and University of Cambridge), K. Sahu (STScI), J. Depasquale (STScI)

In order to measure the mass of a white dwarf called LAWD 37, astronomers took advantage of a phenomenon called gravitational microlensing. This is where the white dwarf passed in front of a background star, and the background star’s light was temporarily bent by the white dwarf’s gravity. The amount of bending could be used to work out the white dwarf’s mass.

Recommended Videos

“These events are rare, and the effects are tiny,” said the lead author of the research, Peter McGill of the University of California, Santa Cruz. “For instance, the size of our measured offset is like measuring the length of a car on the Moon as seen from Earth.”

The researchers were able to determine that LAWD 37 is 56% the mass of our sun, which is comparable to theoretical predictions of white dwarf mass. Having such an accurate measurement of its mass can also help researchers understand more about the structure and composition of these objects.

“The precision of LAWD 37’s mass measurement allows us to test the mass-radius relationship for white dwarfs,” said McGill. “This means testing the theory of degenerate matter (a gas so super-compressed under gravity that it behaves more like solid matter) under the extreme conditions inside this dead star.”

Georgina Torbet
Georgina has been the space writer at Digital Trends space writer for six years, covering human space exploration, planetary…
Amazon’s Starlink rival just crossed a major milestone, but don’t expect perfect internet just yet
Amazon finally showed up to the space internet party
Amazon Leo satellite layout across all launch vehicles

Amazon has taken a significant step toward launching its long-awaited satellite internet service. Following its latest rocket launch, the company now has 396 Project Kuiper satellites in low-Earth orbit, enough to begin offering continuous service across select regions. The milestone keeps Amazon on track for its previously announced goal of launching commercial service by mid-2026.

https://twitter.com/Weber44Chris/status/2072575499461963938?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E2072575499461963938%7Ctwgr%5Ed727a1b853cbf519585e7bf2655943afb2f91bb8%7Ctwcon%5Es1_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.theverge.com%2Fscience%2F960563%2Famazon-leo-service-tipping-point

Read more
Amazon’s Starlink rival is set to launch satellite internet later this year
After launching nearly 400 satellites, Amazon says its Leo broadband service will go live later this year.
Atlas V launches 29 Amazon Leo satellites from Cape Canaveral, Florida

Amazon's long-awaited answer to SpaceX's Starlink is finally nearing liftoff. According to an exclusive report from Reuters, the company plans to begin offering its Leo satellite internet service later this year, after its latest rocket launch pushed the constellation to 394 satellites in orbit.

The pieces are finally falling into place for Project Kuiper

Read more
NASA is investing $590 million in private contractors to build humanity’s first Moon outpost
NASA is counting on private companies to land its Moon Base dream.
Artist impression of a Moon Base concept, with solar arrays for energy generation, greenhouses for food production, and habitats shielded with regolith.

Building a permanent base on the Moon sounds like science fiction, but NASA is making it feel a lot more real. The agency just handed $590 million in contracts to three private companies for four uncrewed lunar lander missions launching in late 2028.

These missions are part of Phase 1 of NASA's broader $30 billion Moon Base program, which needs to deliver landers, rovers, and scientific cargo up there before astronauts eventually move in. These efforts are closely tied NASA's Artemis program, which sent humans on a lunar flyby in April for the first time since the Apollo era.

Read more