A recent discovery by astronomers has shed light on a young sun blowing bubbles inside the Milky Way. NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory captured a baby sunlike star emitting a bubble of hot gas known as an “astrosphere” for the first time.
Earth and the other planets in our solar system reside within the heliosphere, a protective bubble created by the solar winds of our sun. Similarly, other stars have their own bubbles, called astrospheres. HD 61005, a young sunlike star located 120 light-years away, has been observed by Chandra X-ray Observatory as it expands its astrosphere. Despite having a mass and temperature similar to our sun, HD 61005 is only 100 million years old, compared to the sun’s age of five billion years.
Due to its young age, HD 61005 produces a strong solar wind, which contributes to the growth of its bubble. Currently, the star’s astrosphere has a diameter approximately 200 times the distance between Earth and the sun, although it is not as large as the heliosphere.
The star is surrounded by dense dust remnants from its formation, and it produces x-rays when its stellar wind interacts with the cooler interstellar medium nearby. This observation provides insight into the developmental stages of stars like the sun in their infancy.
Astronomer Carey Lisse from Johns Hopkins University commented on the significance of the discovery, stating that studying similar stars’ astrospheres can offer valuable insights into the evolution of the sun’s astrosphere over billions of years as it moves through the galaxy.
The findings of this study have been detailed in a paper published on the preprint server arXiv.org and are set to appear in the Astrophysical Journal. This groundbreaking research not only enhances our understanding of stellar evolution but also highlights the importance of supporting science journalism, such as that provided by Scientific American, to ensure the dissemination of impactful stories that shape our world today.

