The mystery behind a strangely dimming star could soon be
solved.
Astronomers around the world are keeping a close eye on the
star KIC 8462852, which has dimmed
dramatically numerous times over the past few years, dropping in
brightness by up to 22 percent. These big dips have spurred speculation that
the star may be surrounded by some type of alien megastructure — a
hypothesis that will be put to the test if and when KIC 8462852 dims again.
"As long as one of those events occurs again, we should
be able to catch it in the act, and then we'll definitely be able to figure out
what we're seeing," said Jason Wright, an astronomer at Pennsylvania State
University.
"The simplest measurements we can take — just
looking in different wavelengths [of light] — should rule out, or suggest,
alien megastructures right away," Wright told Space.com.
KIC 8462852 is a large star that lies about 1,500
light-years from Earth. The dimming events, which were observed by NASA's Kepler
space telescope between 2009 and 2013, seem too substantial to be
caused by an orbiting planet, many astronomers say.
Another plausible explanation — a planet-forming disk —
doesn't seem to make sense, either, because KIC 8462852 appears to be a mature
star whose planets (if it has any) have already formed.
So scientists are entertaining a number of other ideas,
hypothesizing that the dimming might be caused by a swarm of exocomets or
perhaps even some type of orbiting alien megastructure. This latter possibility
is unlikely, researchers stress, but it's still worth checking out. Indeed,
astronomers have aimed radio telescopes at KIC 8462852 to search
for signals that may have been generated by intelligent aliens.
And follow-up is proceeding on other fronts as well. A
number of optical telescopes are watching the star, waiting for another
multiday dimming event to take place. Once such an event begins, large scopes
outfitted with spectrographs will swing into action, studying and monitoring
the various wavelengths of light emanating from KIC 8462852, Wright said.
"That'll tell us what that material is that the
starlight is being filtered through," he said. "It'll tell us if
maybe we're looking at ordinary astrophysical dust; it'll tell us if we're
looking at gas."
"If we see any color dependence in the dimming — if it
gets dimmer in the ultraviolet than it does in the infrared, for instance
— then that would rule out that whatever we're looking at is a solid
object," Wright added.
Wright thinks the data will eventually show that KIC
8462852's dimming events are caused by dust. If that turns out to be the case,
it would raise another mystery for astronomers to solve — namely, where all
that dust is coming from. Is it being shed by exocomets,
for example, or is the material trapped in a giant ring system around a
Saturn-like alien planet?
"The amount of dimming we get tells us something about
the size of the dust — is it as fine as smoke, or is it pebbles and
things?" Wright said. "That'll help us figure out which of those
scenarios we're looking at."
Credit: space.com
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