Tim Rehm, Brown University
Astronomy Library | Washington, DC
26
May
2:00PM EDT
3:00PM EDT
Earth and Planets Laboratory
Tuve Hall | Washington, DC
24
May
11:30AM EDT
12:30PM EDT
Carnegie Science
Greenewalt Building | Washington, DC
29
June
4:30PM EDT
5:30PM EDT
Two stars orbit each other within an enormous dusty disk in the U Monocerotis system, illustrated here. When the stars are farthest from each other, they funnel material from the disk’s inner edge. At this time, the primary star is slightly obscured by the disk from our perspective. The primary star, a yellow supergiant, expands and contracts. The smaller secondary star is thought to maintain its own disk of material, which likely powers an outflow of gas that emits X-rays.

Two stars orbit each other within an enormous dusty disk in the U Monocerotis system, illustrated here. When the stars are farthest from each other, they funnel material from the disk’s inner edge. At this time, the primary star is slightly obscured by the disk from our perspective. The primary star, a yellow supergiant, expands and contracts. The smaller secondary star is thought to maintain its own disk of material, which likely powers an outflow of gas that emits X-rays.

Credits: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center/Chris Smith (USRA/GESTAR)

Download high-resolution video and images from NASA’s Scientific Visualization Studio

Laura Vega, NASA Goddard
Washington, DC
19
May
2:00PM EDT
3:00PM EDT