Binary star mergers About half of all the stars in the sky are part of binary systems, with two stars orbiting each other. Some binary stars orbit each other so closely that they share the same atmosphere, giving the system a peanut shape. While most such
contact binary systems are stable, some do become unstable and either eject one partner or eventually merge. Astronomers predict that events of this type occur in the
globular clusters of the
Milky Way galaxy about once every 10,000 years. On 2 September 2008 scientists first observed a stellar merger in Scorpius (named
V1309 Scorpii), though it was not known to be the result of a stellar merger at the time.
Type Ia supernovae White dwarfs are the remnants of low-mass stars which, if they form a binary system with a star on a sufficiently close orbit, can cause large stellar explosions known as type Ia supernovae. The normal route by which this happens involves a white dwarf drawing material off a
main sequence or
red giant star to form an
accretion disc. Much more rarely, a type Ia supernova occurs when two white dwarfs orbit each other closely. Emission of
gravitational waves causes the pair to spiral inward. When they finally merge, if their combined mass approaches or exceeds the
Chandrasekhar limit,
carbon fusion is ignited, raising the temperature. Since a white dwarf consists of
degenerate matter, there is no safe equilibrium between
thermal pressure and the weight of overlying layers of the star. Because of this,
runaway fusion reactions rapidly heat up the interior of the combined star and spread, causing a
supernova explosion.
Neutron star mergers Neutron star mergers occur in a fashion similar to the rare
type Ia supernovae resulting from merging white dwarfs. When two
neutron stars orbit each other closely, they spiral inward as time passes due to gravitational radiation. When they meet, their merger leads to the formation of either a heavier neutron star or a black hole, depending on whether the mass of the remnant exceeds the
Tolman–Oppenheimer–Volkoff limit. This creates a magnetic field that is trillions of times stronger than that of Earth, in a matter of one or two milliseconds. Astronomers believe that this type of event is what creates
short gamma-ray bursts and
kilonovae. A
gravitational wave event that occurred on 25 August 2017,
GW170817, was reported on 16 October 2017 to be associated with the merger of two neutron stars in a distant
galaxy, the first such merger to be observed via gravitational radiation.
Thorne–Żytkow objects If a neutron star collides with
red giant of sufficiently low mass and density, the merger is conjectured to produce a
Thorne–Żytkow object, a hypothetical type of
compact star containing a neutron star enveloped by a red giant. ==Formation of planets==