Transcripts of NICER_burst_final_103019_LQ

[00:00:00.00] [music throughout] Narrator: On August 21st, 2019, NASA’s NICER telescope
[00:00:05.00] on the International Space Station observed its brightest X-ray burst to date.
[00:00:09.00] The flare-up came from SAX J1808, a binary system
[00:00:13.00] about 11,000 light-years away. Here, a pulsar— [ON-SCREEN TEXT: “SAX J1808.4-3658”]
[00:00:17.00] a rapidly spinning neutron star—draws gas from its companion,
[00:00:21.00] an object called a brown dwarf that is larger than a planet, but less massive than
[00:00:25.00] a star. Hydrogen gas from the brown dwarf forms an accretion
[00:00:29.00] disk around the pulsar. Every few years, the disk becomes unstable.
[00:00:33.00] This sends a rush of gas toward the pulsar that makes it brighten
[00:00:37.00] in X-rays. The pulsar’s superstrong magnetic field sweeps up
[00:00:41.00] the gas and channels it to the object’s surface.
[00:00:45.00] Hydrogen nuclei falling to the pulsar’s surface fuse together, producing energy [ON-SCREEN TEXT: “Infalling Hydrogen, Fusion”
[00:00:49.00] and forming helium nuclei, which settle out below. This process [ON-SCREEN TEXT: “Infalling Hydrogen, Fusion, Helium Layer”
[00:00:53.00] is similar to what happens inside our Sun. Then, when the conditions [ON-SCREEN TEXT: “Infalling Hydrogen, Fusion, Helium Layer”
[00:00:57.00] are just right, the entire helium layer ignites in a brief, but intense
[00:01:01.00] thermonuclear fireball. Astronomers call this a Type I [ON-SCREEN TEXT: “Type I X-ray Burst”]
[00:01:05.00] X-ray burst. Here’s how it happened. [ON-SCREEN TEXT: “Type I X-ray Burst”]
[00:01:09.00] The explosion first blows off the hydrogen layer, which expands and ultimately dissipates. Then,
[00:01:13.00] the rising radiation builds to the point where it blows off the helium layer,
[00:01:17.00] which overtakes the hydrogen shell. Some of the X-rays emitted in the blast
[00:01:21.00] scatter off of the accretion disk. The fireball then
[00:01:25.00] quickly cools, and the helium settles back onto the surface.
[00:01:29.00] It was all over in 20 seconds, but NICER data clearly show [ON-SCREEN GRAPHICS/TEXT: Graph showing a light curve with two peaks. X-axis: “Time (seconds).” Y-axis: “X-ray counts (x 1,000).” Two highlighted areas are labeled “Hydrogen expansion” and “Helium expansion.” A third area is labeled “Unexplained rebrightening.”]
[00:01:33.00] important details that haven’t been seen together in other bursts. [ON-SCREEN GRAPHICS/TEXT: Graph showing a light curve with two peaks. X-axis: “Time (seconds).” Y-axis: “X-ray counts (x 1,000).” Two highlighted areas are labeled “Hydrogen expansion” and “Helium expansion.” A third area is labeled “Unexplained rebrightening.”]
[00:01:37.00] This will help scientists better understand the extreme physics of these eruptions
[00:01:41.00] on accreting neutron stars.
[00:01:45.00] [music]