The first direct evidence of white dwarf stars solidifying into crystals has been discovered by astronomers at the University of Warwick, and our skies are filled with them.
Observations have revealed that dead remnants  of stars like our Sun, called white dwarfs, have a core of solid oxygen  and carbon due to a phase transition during their lifecycle similar to  water turning into ice but at much higher temperatures. This could make  them potentially billions of years older than previously thought.
 The discovery, led by Dr Pier-Emmanuel Tremblay from the University of Warwick’s Department of Physics, has been published in Nature and is largely based on observations taken with the European Space Agency’s Gaia satellite.
 White dwarf stars are some of the oldest stellar objects in the  universe. They are incredibly useful to astronomers as their predictable  lifecycle allows them to be used as cosmic clocks to estimate the age  of groups of neighboring stars to a high degree of accuracy. They are  the remaining cores of red giants after these huge stars have died and  shed their outer layers and are constantly cooling as they release their  stored up heat over the course of billions of years.
 The astronomers selected 15,000 white dwarf candidates within around 300  light years of Earth from observations made by the Gaia satellite and  analysed data on the stars’ luminosities and colours.
 They identified a pile-up, an excess in the number of stars at specific  colours and luminosities that do not correspond to any single mass or  age. When compared to evolutionary models of stars, the pile-up strongly  coincides to the phase in their development in which latent heat is  predicted to be released in large amounts, resulting in a slowing down  of their cooling process. It is estimated that in some cases these stars  have slowed down their aging by as much as 2 billion years, or 15  percent of the age of our galaxy.
 Dr Tremblay said: “This is the first direct evidence that white dwarfs  crystallise, or transition from liquid to solid. It was predicted fifty  years ago that we should observe a pile-up in the number of white dwarfs  at certain luminosities and colours due to crystallisation and only now  this has been observed.
 “All white dwarfs will crystallise at some point in their evolution,  although more massive white dwarfs go through the process sooner. This  means that billions of white dwarfs in our galaxy have already completed  the process and are essentially crystal spheres in the sky. The Sun  itself will become a crystal white dwarf in about 10 billion years.”
 Crystallisation is the process of a material becoming a solid state, in  which its atoms form an ordered structure. Under the extreme pressures  in white dwarf cores, atoms are packed so densely that their electrons  become unbound, leaving a conducting electron gas governed by quantum  physics, and positively charged nuclei in a fluid form. When the core  cools down to about 10 million degrees, enough energy has been released  that the fluid begins to solidify, forming a metallic core at its heart  with a mantle enhanced in carbon.
 Dr Tremblay adds: “Not only do we have evidence of heat release upon  solidification, but considerably more energy release is needed to  explain the observations. We believe this is due to the oxygen  crystallising first and then sinking to the core, a process similar to  sedimentation on a river bed on Earth. This will push the carbon  upwards, and that separation will release gravitational energy.
 “We’ve made a large step forward in getting accurate ages for these  cooler white dwarfs and therefore old stars of the Milky Way. Much of  the credit for this discovery is down to the Gaia observations. Thanks  to the precise measurements that it is capable of, we have understood  the interior of white dwarfs in a way that we never expected. Before  Gaia we had 100-200 white dwarfs with precise distances and luminosities  — and now we have 200,000. This experiment on ultra-dense matter is  something that simply cannot be performed in any laboratory on Earth.”
Source: Archaeology News Network
 
																				




































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