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Student astronomer discovers 'Rosetta stone' for mysterious cosmic signals

White dwarf binary provides unique natural laboratory for extreme physics.

1 June 2026

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An international team led by astronomers at the University of Sydney has uncovered the clearest evidence yet for the origin of an unusual class of cosmic signals. In doing so, they have identified a rare stellar system that is providing scientists with a natural laboratory to study extreme physics.

Using CSIRO鈥檚 ASKAP radio telescope, the team discovered a small, dense star, called a white dwarf, shredding material from its larger, but less dense, companion star.

As this material spirals in, it produces powerful bursts of radio waves and X-rays in a cycle that repeats every 1.4 hours.

The findings are published in .

Lead author and PhD student from the University of Sydney鈥檚 School of Physics and CSIRO said this provides the first confirmed identification of a what astronomers call 鈥榣ong-period radio transients鈥: cosmic pulses discovered from just a few remote regions of our galaxy.聽

鈥淔or the first time we have pinpointed the origin of these signals, confirming the source to be a 鈥榗ataclysmic variable鈥, or an accreting white dwarf star,鈥 said Mr Rose.

鈥淟ong-period radio transients have puzzled astronomers for years,鈥 Mr Rose said. 鈥淲e鈥檝e only found about a dozen, and their origins have been unclear. Now, we鈥檝e been able to show that the source for one of these transients comes from a white dwarf actively pulling material from a companion star.鈥

A rare and revealing system

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The newly identified system, named ASKAP J1745鈭5051, consists of a white dwarf 鈥 a dense stellar remnant roughly the size of Earth but with the mass close to that of the Sun 鈥 paired with a larger but lower-mass red dwarf star of about one-tenth the Sun鈥檚 mass. The two stars orbit each other extremely closely, completing a full orbit in just over an hour.

As material from the less massive star is drawn towards the white dwarf, it heats up and emits X-rays. At the same time, interactions between the stars鈥 magnetic fields generate regular radio bursts, meaning the signal occurs at specific intervals.

鈥淭hese emissions are all tied to the orbital motion of the system,鈥 Mr Rose said. 鈥淏ut interestingly, the radio and X-ray signals don鈥檛 peak at the same time, which tells us they鈥檙e being produced in different regions of the system.鈥

The team found that the radio emission likely originates where the magnetic fields of the two stars meet and interact with the charged material being ripped from the companion star, producing tightly beamed bursts of radiation.

Solving a cosmic mystery

Long-period radio transients were initially thought to be slow-spinning neutron stars, known as pulsars. However, current models suggest neutron stars rotating this slowly should not be able to produce such signals.

The new discovery strengthens an alternative explanation: that at least some of these mysterious bursts come from systems of two stars, involving white dwarfs.

鈥淪ome similar objects had been linked to binary systems before, but this is the first one where we can clearly see both stars and the accretion process in action,鈥 said Professor Murphy, Head of School at the University of Sydney School of Physics and Chief Investigator at the ARC Centre of Excellence for Gravitational Wave Discovery ().

The system is also only the second known long-period radio transient to emit regular X-rays 鈥 and the first where the cause of the regularity has been confirmed.

PhD Student Kovi Rose

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A 鈥楻osetta stone鈥 for future discoveries

This unique system was discovered using the , owned and operated by CSIRO, Australia's national science agency. ASKAP鈥檚 mix of coverage, resolution, and sensitivity is unparalleled in radio astronomy, allowing for such unusual signals to be detected that would otherwise be missed.

The researchers say that ASKAP J1745-5051 could act as a reference point for understanding other long-period radio transients.

鈥淭his system gives us a way to decode these signals. It could help us determine whether other long-period transients are more like pulsars or like white dwarf systems, acting like a stellar Rosetta stone,鈥 said Mr Rose, referring to the archaeological object discovered in Egypt that helped translate ancient hieroglyphics.

The discovery also provides a unique opportunity to study extreme plasma physics and magnetic interactions under conditions that cannot be replicated on Earth.

鈥淭hese systems are natural laboratories,鈥 Mr Rose said. 鈥淭hey allow us to test our understanding of how matter behaves in strong magnetic fields and under intense gravitational forces.鈥

Future research

The team plans further observations combining radio, optical and X-ray telescopes to better understand how these emissions are generated and whether similar mechanisms can explain the full population of long-period radio transients.

鈥淓ach new discovery is helping us piece together the bigger picture,鈥 Mr Rose said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e only just beginning to understand this new class of cosmic events.鈥

The international team included astronomers from the United States, China, Canada, Spain, Israel and Australia. The team used CSIRO鈥檚 Australia Telescope Compact Array and ASKAP radio telescopes in Australia, the MeerKAT radio telescope in South Africa, the SOAR and Magellan optical telescopes in Chile, and the space-based Swift (UV/X-ray) and Einstein Probe (X-ray) telescopes.

Declaration: The authors declare no competing interests. Research was funded by the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Gravitational Wave Discovery (OzGrav), NASA, the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, the Professor Harry Messel Research Fellowship in Physics Endowment, European Research Council and the China Scholarship Council.聽

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Read the research

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in Nature Astronomy

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