SMU: New delta Scuti: Rare pulsating star in Milky Way

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bystander
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SMU: New delta Scuti: Rare pulsating star in Milky Way

Post by bystander » Wed Feb 15, 2017 6:18 pm

New delta Scuti: Rare pulsating star 7,000 light years away is 1 of only 7 in Milky Way
Southern Methodist University | 2017 Feb 15

A star — as big as or bigger than our sun — in the Pegasus constellation is expanding and contracting in three different directions simultaneously on a scale of once every 2.5 hours, the result of heating and cooling of hydrogen fuel burning 28 million degrees Fahrenheit at its core.
  • The newest delta Scuti (SKOO-tee) star in our night sky is so rare it’s only one of seven identified by astronomers in the Milky Way. Discovered at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, the star — like our sun — is in the throes of stellar evolution, to conclude as a dying ember in millions of years. Until then, the exceptional star pulsates brightly, expanding and contracting from heating and cooling of hydrogen burning at its core. ...
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