A Dead Star May Be Behind These Mysterious Radio Signals
Released on 06/24/2026
[Narrator] For years, astronomers have been
trying to pinpoint the origin
of mysterious radio signals flashing
from deep space at regular intervals.
Known as long-period radio transience
or LPTs, these bursts can repeat anywhere
from minutes to hours apart.
Now, researchers at the University of Sydney
believe they've identified the source
of one of them
using Australia's ASKAP radio telescope.
The mysterious object named this
is a binary star system.
The team found that the system is what's known
as a magnetic cataclysmic variable,
a rare type of binary star system
where a white dwarf,
the dense remnant left behind
when a star reaches the end of its life,
uses its powerful magnetic field
to pull material from a nearby companion star.
In this case, the companion is a small red dwarf,
a low-mass star, still in the active phase
of its life with just a 10th of the sun's mass.
The two stars orbit each other
in just over an hour,
almost perfectly matching the timing
of the radio bursts,
suggesting that the radio pulses are linked
to the system's rapid orbit
and the white dwarf's
ongoing accretion of material.
For researchers, this binary star system
could be the Rosetta Stone
for deciphering LPTs helping to determine
whether other LPTs are powered by white dwarfs,
neutron stars, or something else entirely.
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