StarDate

Billy Henry

StarDate, the longest-running national radio science feature in the U.S., tells listeners what to look for in the night sky.

Episodes

  1. 1 day ago

    Dark-Matter Stars

    Stars age in a well-understood way. Nuclear fusion in a star’s core converts lighter elements to heavier ones. At some point, that process ends and the star dies. How long the star lives and how it does so are determined by its mass. But a recent study says that some stars could be powered in part by dark matter. That could affect how long the stars live, and make them look younger than they really are. Dark matter accounts for about 85 percent of all the matter in the universe. It produces no energy. We know it’s there only because its gravity tugs the visible matter around it. It may consist of some type of subatomic particle, but no one’s found it. But if certain types of dark-matter particles ram together, they may cancel each other with a flash. The study says that could impact stars in the center of the galaxy, where dark matter is tightly packed. Massive stars, with stronger gravity, could pull in more dark matter. That would keep them going practically forever. And it would make them look younger. Lighter stars couldn’t pull in enough dark matter to keep them going. Instead, the dark-matter reactions would blow the stars apart. A cluster at the heart of the galaxy contains many heavy stars that look young in some ways, but old in others. And the cluster doesn’t have any lightweight stars. That combination could mean that the evolution of the stars in that region is being influenced by dark matter. Script by Damond Benningfield

  2. 7 Jul

    Venus and Regulus

    The “evening star” nuzzles the lion the next few nights. Venus will pass quite close to Regulus, Leo’s brightest star. At their closest, they’ll be just one degree apart – the width of a pencil held at arm’s length. Despite their proximity in the sky, Venus and Regulus are nowhere close to each other in reality – they’re separated by many trillions of miles. Venus is a planet in our own solar system. Right now, it’s 92 million miles away. That’s about the average distance to the Sun – a distance known as the astronomical unit. It’s the basic “yardstick” for measuring the solar system. It’s a lot more convenient than miles or kilometers – a lot fewer zeroes to worry about. But it’s not a great yardstick for measuring the distances between stars. Regulus, for example, is more than five million astronomical units from us – five million times farther than Venus. Yet it’s one of our closer neighbors. So there are two other units for measuring those distances. The most common is the light-year – the distance light travels in one year – almost six trillion miles. And astronomers generally use parsecs; one parsec is three and a quarter light-years. So Regulus is about 24 parsecs from Earth. Regulus is close to the upper left of Venus at nightfall this evening. Venus will slide past the star over the next two nights. They’ll be closest together on Wednesday – but close only in appearance. Script by Damond Benningfield

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StarDate, the longest-running national radio science feature in the U.S., tells listeners what to look for in the night sky.

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