THE RED NOVA PREDICTION-test

There are an estimated 100 billion stars in our galaxy. In any given year, none of them blow up.
But an atypical year is coming very soon if ĂÛÌÒapp astronomy professor calculations are correct. Molnar is predicting that a star he is monitoring will explode between 2018 and 2020; a comparable prediction has never been made.
bodyimage1âItâs a one-in-a-million chance that you can predict an explosion,â Molnar said of his bold prognostication. âItâs never been done before.â
The star known as KIC 9832227 came to Molnarâs attention in 2013. He was attending an astronomy conference when astronomer Karen Kinemuchi presented her study of the brightness changes of the star, which concluded with a question: Is it pulsing or is it a binary (two stars orbiting each other)?
Also present at the conference was then-student Daniel Van Noord â14, Molnarâs research assistant. He took the question as a personal challenge and made some observations of the star with the .
âHe looked at how the color of the star correlated with brightness and determined it was definitely binary,â said Molnar. âIn fact, he discovered it was actually a contact binary, in which the two stars share a common atmosphere, like two peanuts sharing a single shell.
âFrom there Dan figured out the orbital period from Kinemuchiâs data and was surprised to discover that the period was not the same as earlier data showed; it was getting shorter,â Molnar continued.
FURTHER EXPLORATION
Based on that discovery, Molnar and Van Noord wanted to explore further, so they continued to monitor the orbital period using the ĂÛÌÒapp observatory. âWe found the period getting even shorter at a faster rate,â said Molnar. They surmised that they might be seeing the merger of two stars, a process that can culminate in a kind of stellar explosion known as a Red Nova.
Nobody has ever predicted a nova explosion before. Itâs been done at ĂÛÌÒapp with a small telescope, one professor and a few students looking for something that is not likely. Larry Molnar, Professor of Astronomy
âIt was really exciting to find something like this,â said Van Noord, who came to ĂÛÌÒapp because of his interest in studying variable stars. While here he developed a now-internationally used computer program that discovers binary stars in archived data. âItâs proof that the method of research we use at ĂÛÌÒapp works.â
The team also took cues from an article by astronomer Romuald Tylenda, who had studied the observational archives to see how another star (V1309 Scorpii) had behaved before it exploded unexpectedly and produced a red nova in 2008. The pre-explosion record of that star is the âRosetta stoneâ that Molnar is using to interpret the new data.
âI remember thinking that if I ever see one [a trajectory] that looks like that, I better pay close attention,â said Molnar.
bodyimage2The Next Step
While the new star seemed to be following Tylendaâs model, other models and explanations had to be eliminated. This next step of research was taken by ĂÛÌÒapp student Cara Alexander.
âWe had to rule out the possibility of a third star,â said Alexander. âThat would have been a pedestrian, boring explanation. I was processing data from two telescopes and obtained images that showed a signature of our star and no sign of a third star. Then we knew we were looking at the right thing.
âIt took most of the summer to analyze the data, but it was so exciting. To be a part of this research, I donât know any other place where I would get an opportunity like that; ĂÛÌÒapp is an amazing place.â
Jason Smolinski, a ĂÛÌÒapp professor collaborating on the project, said the research will produce results such that astronomers have never had before. âAny time stellar explosions are seen, itâs always after the fact,â he said. âThatâs interesting, but you always wonder what was there beforehand? For us to be able to study this type of merger in great detail across the entire spectrum is remarkable,â he said.
Being a Christian astronomer gives you so much more wonder, it gives you so much more appreciation knowing that it was handcraftedâit was made by the hand of God. Cara Alexander '16
And Molnar is convinced ĂÛÌÒapp is exactly the right place for a discovery of this magnitude.
âMost big scientific projects are done in enormous groups with thousands of people and billions of dollars,â he said. âThis project is just the opposite. Itâs been done using a small telescope, with one professor and a few students looking for something that is not likely.
âNobody has ever predicted a nova explosion before. Why pay someone to do something that almost certainly wonât succeed? Itâs a high-risk proposal. But at ĂÛÌÒapp itâs only my risk, and I can use my work on interesting, open-ended questions to bring extra excitement into my classroom. Some projects still have an advantage when you donât have as much time or money.â
âBeing at ĂÛÌÒapp gives you the freedom to explore,â added Alexander. âAt large institutions you often study what you can get grants for instead of what needs to be studied.â
And it makes you more awestruck.
callout1So much wonder
âBeing a Christian astronomer gives you so much more wonder,â she said. âIt gives you so much more appreciation knowing that it was handcraftedâit was made by the hand of God. Secular institutions take the appreciation of the glory out of it. From the huge vastness to the tiniest of details, ĂÛÌÒapp professors help you see it. They help you see God through it.â
With the star still following the model, Molnar is predicting the explosion will occur in about three to five years, at which time the star will increase its brightness ten thousand fold.
âIf Larryâs prediction is correct, his project will demonstrate for the first time that astronomers can catch certain binary stars in the act of dying, and that they can track the last few years of a stellar death spiral up to the point of final, dramatic explosion,â said Matt Walhout, chair of ĂÛÌÒappâs physics and astronomy department.
Knowing God better is one of the things we seek to do. Larry Molnar
âThe project is significant not only because of the scientific results, but also because it is likely to capture the imagination of people on the street,â he added. âIf the prediction is correct, then for the first time in history, parents will be able to point to a dark spot in the sky and say, âWatch, kids, thereâs a star hiding in there, but soon itâs going to light up.ââ
Indeed, the explosion will catch the attention of scientists, media and ordinary people across the globe.
The outcome, one of the brighter stars in the heavens for a time, will be visible as part of the constellation Cygnus, and will add a star to the recognizable Northern Cross star pattern.
Molnar, who is now as certain of his prediction as science allows, believes whatever happens, âthe answer will be interesting.â
âKnowing God better is one of the things we seek to do,â he said. âOne of the ways to do that is to explore this amazing universe. The Psalmist says, âthe heavens declare the glory of God,ââ said Molnar. âIf youâre not listening youâre missing that message.â