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The anti-ageing secrets of stars: White dwarfs are able to slow down their cooling and appear a BILLION years younger than they really are, Hubble Space Telescope images reveal

  White dwarfs – the stellar remains of long-dead stars – 'appear more youthful than they actually are', a new study claims.  Thanks...

 White dwarfs – the stellar remains of long-dead stars – 'appear more youthful than they actually are', a new study claims. 

Thanks to data from the Hubble Space Telescope, astronomers have discovered the first evidence that white dwarfs can slow down their rate of ageing by burning hydrogen on their surface. 

The experts compared cooling white dwarfs in two massive collections of stars – the globular clusters M3 and M13. 

Around 70 per cent of all white dwarfs in M13 have an outer envelope of hydrogen, allowing them to burn for longer and hence cool more slowly, they found. 

White dwarfs are the incredibly dense remains of sun-sized stars after they exhaust their nuclear fuel, shrunk down to roughly the size of Earth.  

Roughly 98 per cent of all the stars in the universe will ultimately end up as white dwarfs, including our own Sun.  


The experts compared cooling white dwarfs in two massive collections of stars - the globular clusters M3 and M13. Globular clusters are dense balls of about one million ancient stars, all bound by gravity. This image shows a wide-field view of M3. 'Essentially zero' of all white dwarfs in M13 are slow-burning, the researchers reveal

The experts compared cooling white dwarfs in two massive collections of stars - the globular clusters M3 and M13. Globular clusters are dense balls of about one million ancient stars, all bound by gravity. This image shows a wide-field view of M3. 'Essentially zero' of all white dwarfs in M13 are slow-burning, the researchers reveal


According to the European Space Agency, the study challenges the prevalent view of white dwarfs as inert, slowly cooling stars.

'We have found the first observational evidence that white dwarfs can still undergo stable thermonuclear activity,' said study author Jianxing Chen at the University of Bologna and the Italian National Institute for Astrophysics.

'This was quite a surprise, as it is at odds with what is commonly believed.'      

White dwarfs are common objects in the cosmos. They're the slowly cooling stars that have cast off their outer layers during the last stages of their lives.  

Studying these cooling stages helps astronomers understand not only white dwarfs, but also their earlier stages. 

Researchers looked at clusters M3 and M13, as they share many physical properties such as age and 'metallicity' – elements other than hydrogen and helium.

But the populations of stars that will eventually give rise to white dwarfs are different in the two clusters. 

In particular, the overall colour of stars at an evolutionary stage known as the Horizontal Branch are bluer in M13, indicating a population of hotter stars.

This makes M3 and M13 together a 'perfect natural laboratory' in which to test how different populations of white dwarfs cool.

'The superb quality of our Hubble observations provided us with a full view of the stellar populations of the two globular clusters,' said Chen. 'This allowed us to really contrast how stars evolve in M3 and M13.'

Using Hubble's Wide Field Camera 3, the team observed M3 and M13 at near-ultraviolet wavelengths, allowing them to compare more than 700 white dwarfs in the two clusters. 


To investigate the physics underpinning white dwarf evolution, astronomers compared cooling white dwarfs in two massive collections of stars: the globular clusters M3 and M13. These two clusters share many physical properties such as age and metallicity but the populations of stars which will eventually give rise to white dwarfs are different. This makes M3 and M13 together a perfect natural laboratory in which to test how different populations of white dwarfs cool

To investigate the physics underpinning white dwarf evolution, astronomers compared cooling white dwarfs in two massive collections of stars: the globular clusters M3 and M13. These two clusters share many physical properties such as age and metallicity but the populations of stars which will eventually give rise to white dwarfs are different. This makes M3 and M13 together a perfect natural laboratory in which to test how different populations of white dwarfs cool

This image shows a wide-field view of M13, a globular cluster. Around 70 per cent of all white dwarfs in M13 are slow-burning, according to the experts

This image shows a wide-field view of M13, a globular cluster. Around 70 per cent of all white dwarfs in M13 are slow-burning, according to the experts 

They found that M3 contains standard white dwarfs that are simply cooling stellar cores. 


M13, on the other hand, contains two populations of white dwarfs – standard white dwarfs and those that have managed to hold on to an outer envelope of hydrogen, allowing them to burn for longer.

Comparing their results with computer simulations of stellar evolution in M13, the team found roughly 70 per cent of the white dwarfs in M13 are burning hydrogen on their surfaces, slowing down the rate at which they are cooling.

M3, meanwhile, has 'essentially zero' slow burning white dwarfs, according to study author Professor Francesco Ferraro, also at the University of Bologna and the Italian National Institute for Astrophysics. 

'At the moment, no stellar systems with 100 per cent slow white dwarfs is known,' he told MailOnline.    

This discovery could have consequences for how astronomers measure the ages of stars in the Milky Way. 

The evolution of white dwarfs has previously been modelled as a predictable cooling process, according to the team.

This relatively straightforward relationship between age and temperature has led astronomers to use the white dwarf cooling rate as a natural clock to determine the ages of star clusters, particularly globular and open clusters.

NASA image shows the Hubble Space Telescope floating against the background of space

NASA image shows the Hubble Space Telescope floating against the background of space 

However, white dwarfs burning hydrogen could cause these age estimates to be inaccurate by as much as 1 billion years – unless other methods of ageing stellar systems are used.

'Our work suggests to use caution in adopting white dwarf cooling sequence as a clock,' said Professor Ferraro. 

'Of course this can affect the age of any stellar system whose age is based exclusively on the white dwarf cooling sequence. 

'Fortunately, white dwarfs are not the most used clocks to measure the age of stellar systems.'

Our Sun will become a red giant in about five billion years before it eventually shrinks down into a compact white dwarf. 

When this happens, Professor Ferraro said our Sun will be a normal white dwarf – not a slow-burning one.  

Slow-burning white dwarfs are essentially generated by low-mass, low-metallicity progenitor stars, he said, so there's 'no possibility of it to get a slow ageing'.

The research team are now investigating other clusters similar to M13 'to further constrain the conditions which drive stars to maintain the thin hydrogen envelope which allows them to age slowly', according to Professor Ferraro.

'Our discovery challenges the definition of white dwarfs as we consider a new perspective on the way in which stars get old,' he said.  

The study has been published in Nature Astronomy

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