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Bizarre star could host a neutron star in its core
#1
Bizarre star could host a neutron star in its core
http://www.nature.com/news/bizarre-star-...re-1.14478

Quote:Astronomers say that they have discovered the first example of a long-sought cosmic oddity: a bloated, dying star with a surprise in its core — an ultradense neutron star.

Aside from the oddity of the prospect of a red giant "swallowing" a neutron star, I found it interesting that the star in question is located in another galaxy (admittedly, a very close one) - and despite that, we're able to conduct stellar spectroscopy on it.
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#2
RE: Bizarre star could host a neutron star in its core
Fascinating.

[Image: spock_cat.jpg]
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#3
RE: Bizarre star could host a neutron star in its core
The combined mass of the neutron star at the center and red giant around it is almost certainly greater than the minimum mass needed to overcome neutron pressure and force the object to further collapse into a black hole.

The question is when would this collapse happen?
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#4
RE: Bizarre star could host a neutron star in its core
(January 9, 2014 at 3:31 pm)Chuck Wrote: The combined mass of the neutron star at the center and red giant around it is almost certainly greater than the minimum mass needed to overcome neutron pressure and force the object to further collapse into a black hole.

The question is when would this collapse happen?

You're probably correct on that. The fly in the ointment is these objects "form" presumably after the host star has already progressed into the red giant phase. The mass is there, but not the density, which as I understand it is the important metric. It's an odd problem as stars with sufficient mass to become black holes (or even neutron stars) are not thought to go through the red giant phase.
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