When a star in a
binary fills its
Roche lobe (either due to being very close to its companion or having a relatively large radius), it begins to lose matter, which streams towards its neutron star companion. The star may also undergo
mass loss by exceeding its
Eddington luminosity, or through strong
stellar winds, and some of this material may become gravitationally attracted to the neutron star. In the circumstance of a short
orbital period and a massive partner star, both of these processes may contribute to the transfer of material from the companion to the neutron star. In both cases, the falling material originates from the surface layers of the partner star and is thus rich in
hydrogen and
helium. The matter streams from the donor into the accretor at the intersection of the two Roche lobes, which is also the location of the first
Lagrange point, L1. Because of the revolution of the two stars around a common centre of gravity, the material then forms a jet travelling towards the accretor. Because compact stars have high
gravitational fields, the material falls with a high
velocity and
angular momentum towards the neutron star. The angular momentum prevents it from immediately joining the surface of the accreting star. It continues to orbit the accretor in the orbital plane, colliding with other accreting material en route, thereby losing energy, and in so doing forming an
accretion disk, which also lies in the orbital plane. In an X-ray burster, this material accretes onto the surface of the neutron star, where it forms a dense layer. After mere hours of accumulation and gravitational compression,
nuclear fusion starts in this matter. This begins as a stable process, the hot
CNO cycle. However, continued accretion creates a
degenerate shell of matter, in which the temperature rises (greater than 109
kelvin) but this does not alleviate thermodynamic conditions. This causes the
triple-α cycle to quickly become favored, resulting in a
helium flash. The additional energy provided by this flash allows the CNO burning to break out into thermonuclear runaway. The early phase of the burst is powered by the
alpha-p process, which quickly yields to the
rp-process.
Nucleosynthesis can proceed as high as
mass number 100, but was shown to end definitively at
isotopes of tellurium that undergo
alpha decay such as 107Te. Within seconds, most of the accreted material is burned, powering a bright X-ray flash that is observable with X-ray (or gamma ray) telescopes. Theory suggests that there are several burning regimes which cause variations in the burst, such as ignition condition, energy released, and recurrence, with the regimes caused by the nuclear composition, both of the accreted material and the burst ashes. This is mostly dependent on hydrogen, helium, or
carbon content. Carbon ignition may also be the cause of the extremely rare "superbursts". ==Observation of bursts==