More Images of Mira
1
Chandra X-ray Image of Mira
The Chandra image shows Mira A (right), a highly evolved red giant
star, and Mira B (left), a white dwarf. Mira A is losing gas rapidly
from its upper atmosphere via a stellar wind. Mira B exerts a gravitational
tug that creates a gaseous bridge between the two stars. Gas from
the wind and bridge accumulates in an accretion disk around Mira B
and collisions between rapidly moving particles in the disk produce
X-rays.
Scale: 1.2 arcsec per side
(Credit: NASA/CXC/SAO/M. Karovska et al.)
2
HST Ultraviolet Image of Mira
The ability to distinguish between the interacting stars Mira A &
B allowed a team of scientists to observe an X-ray outburst from Mira
A. An ultraviolet image made by the Hubble Space Telescope February
16, 2004, was key to identifying the X-ray outburst with the red giant
star.
Scale: 1.2 arcsec per side
(Credit: NASA/M. Karovska et al.)
3
Illustration of Mira System
This artist's conception of the Mira star system depicts Mira A (right),
a highly evolved red giant star, and Mira B (left), a white dwarf.
Mira A is losing gas rapidly from its upper atmosphere via a stellar
wind. Mira B exerts a gravitational tug that creates a gaseous bridge
between the two stars. Gas from the wind and bridge accumulates in
an accretion disk around Mira B and collisions between rapidly moving
particles in the disk produce X-rays.
(Credit: NASA/CXC/M.Weiss)
4
Chandra X-ray Spectrum of Mira
This graphic shows the Chandra spectrum for Mira (white crosses) and
the best spectral fit (solid yellow line). This spectrum was obtained
during the 70,000-second exposure on December 6, 2003. The Chandra
spectrum shows strong emission from lower-energy X-rays and potentially
multiple components of the higher, or "harder," X-rays.
(Credit: NASA/CXC/SAO/M. Karovska et al.)
5
Chandra X-ray Image with Scale Bar
Scalebar: 0.3 arcsec
(Credit: NASA/CXC/SAO/M. Karovska et al.)
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