This enhanced image from the far-ultraviolet detector on NASA's Galaxy
Evolution Explorer shows a ghostly shell of ionized gas around Z
Camelopardalis, a binary, or double-star system featuring a collapsed,
dead star known as a white dwarf, and a companion star.
The image was processed to enhance the diffuse emissions from the shell.
Z Cam is the bright object near the center of the image. Parts of the
shell are seen as a lobe-like, light-blue feature below and to the right
of Z Cam, and as two large, light blue, perpendicular lines on the left.
The massive shell around Z Cam provides evidence of material ejected
during and swept up by a powerful nova eruption, called a classical nova,
which likely occurred a few thousand years ago.
In exploding binary systems, one of the two stars steals material from the
other until it builds up to a certain level; at that point, the system
erupts in a giant inferno. In the case of Z Cam, the white dwarf is
pilfering material from its sedate companion.
There are two classes of exploding binary star systems, or cataclysmic
variables: recurrent dwarf novae, which erupt in small, "hiccup-like"
blasts episodically, and classical novae, which undergo huge explosions
thousands of times more powerful than dwarf novae.
Z Cam was the one of the first known recurrent dwarf novae. Yet the shell
of ionized gas around Z Cam detected by the Galaxy Evolution Explorer can
only be explained as the remnant of a full-blown classical nova explosion.
The discovery of the shell provides the first evidence that some binary
systems undergo both types of explosions. Previously, a link between the
two types of novae had been predicted, but there was no evidence to
support the theory.
The Galaxy Evolution Explorer first began imaging Z Cam in 2003; this
image was taken on Jan. 25, 2004. The type of emission found around Z Cam
is most easily visible at far-ultraviolet wavelengths.
Most of the background galaxies and stars have been eliminated by the
image processing, although a few linger as white spots near the top. The
light-blue streaky clump in the bottom right corner is created by
ultraviolet light reflected by dust. It is uncertain if Z Cam is the
source of the dust-scattered light.