Scientists spot ‘two-faced’ white dwarf star

Published July 22, 2023
An artist’s concept shows the two-faced white dwarf star, nicknamed Janus. The blue-tinted dead cinder of a star, which was once a star like our sun, is composed of hydrogen on one side and helium on the other.—Reuters
An artist’s concept shows the two-faced white dwarf star, nicknamed Janus. The blue-tinted dead cinder of a star, which was once a star like our sun, is composed of hydrogen on one side and helium on the other.—Reuters

WASHINGTON: Some people are two-faced, figuratively speaking of course. The ancient Roman god Janus was two-faced, literally — with one looking forward and another backward, representing transitions and duality. But a two-faced star? Yes, indeed.

Scientists have observed a white dwarf star — a hot stellar remnant that is among the densest objects in the cosmos — that they have nicknamed Janus owing to the fact it has the peculiar distinction of being composed of hydrogen on one side and helium on the other.

“Janus is the Roman god with two faces, so we thought it was very appropriate. Moreover, Janus is the god of transition, and the white dwarf might be currently transitioning from having an atmosphere made of hydrogen to one made of helium,” said Ilaria Caiazzo, a Caltech postdoctoral fellow in astrophysics and lead author of the study published this week in the journal Nature.

The star is located in our Milky Way galaxy about 1,300 light years from Earth in the direction of the Cygnus constellation. A light year is the distance light travels in a year, 5.9 trillion miles (9.5 trillion km).

Janus is fairly massive for a white dwarf, with a mass 20 per cent larger than that of our sun compressed into an object with a diameter half that of Earth. It rotates on its axis every 15 minutes — very fast considering these stars usually rotate every few hours to a few days.

“White dwarfs form at the very end of a star’s life. About 97pc of all stars are destined to become white dwarfs when they die,” Caiazzo said.

“Our sun, for example, is currently burning hydrogen into helium in its core. When the hydrogen in the core is depleted, the sun will start burning helium into carbon and oxygen. When the helium also is gone from the centre, the sun will eject its outer layers into space in an event called a planetary nebula and the core will slowly contract and become a white dwarf,” Caiazzo added.

Published in Dawn, July 22nd, 2023

Opinion

Editorial

Afghan hostilities
Updated 28 Feb, 2026

Afghan hostilities

The need is for an immediate ceasefire and substantive negotiations, with the onus on the Taliban to rein in cross-border attacks.
Cutting taxes
28 Feb, 2026

Cutting taxes

PRIME Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s plan to cut direct taxes for businesses in the next budget acknowledges the strain...
KCR challenge
28 Feb, 2026

KCR challenge

THE Karachi Circular Railway is being discussed again. It seems that the project, or, rather, the hopes of it, are...
A collective effort
Updated 27 Feb, 2026

A collective effort

CONSIDERING the relentless wave of terrorist attacks Pakistan has been facing over the past few weeks, the...
Criminalising criticism
27 Feb, 2026

Criminalising criticism

ISLAMABAD seems to have developed quite a thin skin. A letter sent to the prime minister on Wednesday by leading...
Utter chaos
27 Feb, 2026

Utter chaos

THE PTI is in disarray. The lack of discipline within its ranks, which it has long refused to address, is finally...