Dusty spiral around a red star may explain end of Sun's life


 
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Astronomers have discovered a never-before-seen spiral structure around a dying red giant star about 1,000 light-years from Earth that may offer a preview of how the Sun will be at the end of its life.
Using the Atacama Large Millimeter/Submillimeter Array (ALMA) in northern Chile, an international team of astronomers found the spiral structure in the envelope of gas and dust around a red giant star and took a detailed three-dimensional reading of its composition, SPACE.com reported.
The spiral is thought to be created from the gases being expelled by the dying red giant called R Sculptoris. It provides information about the velocity of the wind blowing off of R Sculptoris, revealing that the star has expelled three times as much mass as previously estimated.
"We can 'walk along' the spiral and use it as a clock to see what happened when," said Matthias Maercker, of Germany's University of Bonn.
Low- to intermediate-mass stars like the sun expand into red giants during the last stages of their evolution. When the sun reaches this stage in about 5 billion years, its outer layer will spread as far as Earth's orbit.
Every 10,000 to 50,000 years, these gaseous giants burn helium for a few hundred years in a runaway process known as a thermal pulse, causing the layers of the star to mix.
"Thermal elements are an essential part of late stellar evolution," Maercker told SPACE.com in an email.
"They are responsible for the formation of new elements, which eventually will get incorporated into new stars and planets," Maercker said.


By studying the corkscrewed expulsion from R Sculptoris,the astronomers calculated that the star was shedding more mass during thermal pulses than had been estimated.
"This means that much more mass is lost during a time where new elements cannot yet be incorporated into the wind. Hence it will take longer for these elements to be blown into space - most likely, only during the next pulse," Maercker said.
The spiral shape was caused by a companion star pushing through the layers expelled by T Sculptoris. The formation is allowing the scientists to study the history of the thermal pulses: Elements blown off at higher speeds create more widely separated spirals, while phases of slower mass loss are more tightly packed.
Located in the constellation Sculptor in the Southern Hemisphere, R Sculptoris is a typical red giant, so its evolution could provide a hint of what to expect from the Sun down the road, astronomers believe.
The research was published in the journal Nature


How Cervical Mucus Helps Predict Your Most Fertile Days

Get over the gross-out factor and learn how to use cervical mucus to let you know when you’re most fertile. Also check out our Fertility Calculator to find the best times for sex.
Get over the gross-out factor and learn how to use cervical mucus to let you know when you’re most fertile.
There are many ovulation predictor kits on the market, but there’s one inside every woman that’s absolutely free. Cyclical changes in the secretions produced by the cervix provide a simple, easy way for women to monitor their cycles–and their most fertile times. As opposed to the change in basal body temperature that occurs after ovulation, the change in cervical mucus (CM) occurs several days prior to ovulation, giving women the opportunity to time intercourse for conception.
The cervix is the neck of the uterus, leading to the vagina. It’s not a smooth pipe, but a passage filled with crevices. In these nooks and crannies, CM is produced and released. Hormonal changes over the course of a woman’s menstrual cycle affect the amount and the consistency of CM. In a way, CM is the gatekeeper of the reproductive system. Sperm released into the vagina have to swim through the cervix–and its CM–and past the uterus if they are to successfully fertilize the egg as it makes its passage down the fallopian tubes.
For most of the cycle, CM acts as a barrier to sperm. It protects the cervix chemically–with white blood cells fighting foreign bodies–and mechanically–acting as a plug and closing the cervical canal.
But during the fertile phase, the consistency and composition of CM changes. Instead of being a barrier, CM now aids and accelerates the sperms’ passage through the cervix. CM during the fertile phase also extends sperm longevity, allowing them to live for up to five days within the female body. The CM even acts as a quality control device, screening the sperm and catching any with irregular or curved swimming.
By observing CM to pinpoint the fertile phase, women can help increase their chances of conception. Changes in CM will indicate the days leading up to ovulation, and sexual intercourse during this time will ensure that sperm—nourished by fertile phase CM—will be present when the egg is released.

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What to Look For
A woman can monitor her CM by feel or appearance. The sensation of CM in the vagina–dry, moist, or wet–is one clue to follow for detecting impending ovulation. The color (white, creamy, cloudy or clear) and consistency (sticky, or smooth and slippery) are others.
Women can see and feel CM when it moistens their underwear, or when they wipe themselves with toilet paper. Bearing down (such as with a bowel movement) or releasing the muscles following a Kegel exercise may release more mucus. Women can also conduct a “finger test.” To do this, a woman should first thoroughly wash her hands, then carefully insert a finger into the vagina. When the finger is removed, she can observe and note the color and consistency of the CM by stretching it out between two fingers. Because it may sometimes be difficult to distinguish between CM and semen, it’s best to test CM before intercourse, or wait for a while afterwards. Cervical mucus can also be altered by vaginal infections, medication, and birth control.
The chart below gives the information for de-coding CM to detect ovulation.
Phase Sensation CM Appearance
Pre-ovulatory Dry No visible mucus.
Fertile Moist or sticky White or cream colored, thick to slightly stretchy. Breaks easily when stretched. 
Highly Fertile Slippery, wet, lubricated  Increase in amount. Thin, watery, transparent, like egg white.
Post-ovulatory  Dry or sticky Sharp decrease in amount. Thick, opaque white or cream-colored.
Barbara J. B. Clark, a certified physician assistant at Knox Ob-Gyn in Galesburg, Illinois, describes the most fertile CM as “raw egg white.” This fertile CM is clear, and may stretch several inches before it breaks.
Some women may think that gazing at toilet paper or performing an internal test is not only a bit odd, but even distasteful. But it’s a feeling worth getting over. Clark believes that women who check their CM “feel like they’re doing something to help.” They’re using their bodies’ signals to predict ovulation and help themselves conceive.
This article originally appeared in the Fall 2005 issue of Conceive Magazine.