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Scenario for Eta Carinae Outburst

Scenario for Eta Carinae Outburst

This six-panel graphic illustrates a possible scenario for the powerful blast seen 170 years ago from the star system Eta Carinae.

1. Eta Carinae initially was a triple-star system. Two hefty stars (A and B) in the system are orbiting closely and a third companion C is orbiting much farther away.

2. When the most massive of the close binary stars (A) nears the end of its life, it begins to expand and dumps most of its material onto its slightly smaller sibling (B).

3. The sibling (B) bulks up to about 100 solar masses and becomes extremely bright. The donor star (A) has been stripped of its hydrogen layers, exposing its hot helium core. The mass transfer alters the gravitational balance of the system, and the helium-core star moves farther away from its monster sibling.

4. The helium-core star then interacts gravitationally with the outermost star (C), pulling it into the fray. The two stars trade places, and the outermost star gets kicked inward.

5. Star C, moving inward, interacts with the extremely massive sibling, creating a disk of material around the giant star.

6. Eventually, star C merges with the hefty star, producing an explosive event that forms bipolar lobes of material ejected from the monster sibling. Meanwhile, the surviving companion, A, settles into an elongated orbit around the merged pair. Every 5.5 years it passes through the giant star’s outer gaseous envelope, producing shock waves that are detected in X-rays.

  • Release Date
    August 2, 2018
  • Science Release
    Astronomers Uncover New Clues to the Star that Wouldn’t Die
  • Credit
    NASA, ESA, and A. Feild (STScI)

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Last Updated
Mar 28, 2025
Contact
Media

Claire Andreoli
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center
Greenbelt, Maryland
claire.andreoli@nasa.gov