In astronomy, the term iron star has been used for two unrelated types of star:
Blue supergiant
An iron star is a type of
blue supergiant which has a forest of forbidden Fe
II lines in its
spectral line. They are potentially quiescent hot luminous blue variables.
Eta Carinae has been described as a prototypical example.
Compact iron star formation
An iron star is a hypothetical type of
compact star that could occur in the
universe in the extremely far future, after perhaps 10
1500 years.
The premise behind the formation of iron stars states that muon-catalyzed fusion occurring via quantum tunnelling would cause the light Atomic nucleus in ordinary matter to fuse into iron-56 nuclei, due to its nature as the atomic nucleus with the lowest mass per nucleon. Fission and Alpha decay would then make heavy nuclei decay into iron, converting stellar-mass objects to cold spheres of iron. The formation of these stars is only a possibility if proton decay. Though the surface of a neutron star may be iron according to some predictions, it is distinct from an iron star.
By the end of 101026 to 101076 years, iron stars would have collapsed into neutron stars and .
In popular culture
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The Soviet film The Andromeda Nebula is about a starship low on fuel caught by an iron star's gravity, with the star itself being so dim that it can only be seen in the infrared. It is based on the novel Andromeda Nebula by Ivan Yefremov written when steady state theory was dominant and iron stars were expected to exist in the Milky Way.
See also
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Future of an expanding universe
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Hypothetical star
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Heat death of the universe