Unveiling the Enigmatic World of Stripped Binary Stars

TL;DR Summary
Astronomers at the University of Toronto have discovered a population of massive stars in binary systems that have been stripped of their hydrogen envelopes by their companions. This finding sheds light on the origins of hydrogen-poor core-collapse supernovae and neutron star mergers. The researchers used ultraviolet data from the Swift-UVOT telescope to identify these stripped stars, which are believed to be rare and have important implications for our understanding of supernovae, gravitational waves, and the properties of distant galaxies. The discovery also provides opportunities for more detailed physics studies and measurements of stellar winds.
Topics:science#astronomy#binary-stars#hydrogen-poor-supernovae#massive-stars#neutron-star-mergers#ultraviolet-light
- Astronomers discover first population of binary stripped stars Phys.org
- Astronomers discover 25 'stripped stars' that may be a missing link in supernova science Livescience.com
- Supernovae: Study unravels puzzle that has baffled astrophysicists The Jerusalem Post
- An observed population of intermediate-mass helium stars that have been stripped in binaries Science
- Reaching for the (invisible) stars EurekAlert
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