A blowtorch of seething gasses erupting from a volcanically growing monster star has been captured by NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope. Stretching across 8 light-years, the length of the stellar eruption is approximately twice the distance between our Sun and the next nearest stars, the Alpha Centauri system. The size and strength of this particular stellar jet, located in a nebula known as Sharpless 2-284 (Sh2-284 for short), qualifies it as rare, say researchers.
Streaking across space at hundreds
of thousands of miles per hour, the outflow resembles a double-bladed dueling
lightsaber from the Star Wars films. The central protostar, weighing as much as
ten of our Suns, is located 15,000 light-years away in the outer reaches of our
galaxy.
The Webb discovery was
serendipitous. “We didn’t really know there was a massive star with this kind
of super-jet out there before the observation. Such a spectacular outflow of
molecular hydrogen from a massive star is rare in other regions of our galaxy,”
said lead author Yu Cheng of the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan.
Image A: Stellar Jet in Sh2-284 (NIRCam Image)
Webb’s image of the enormous stellar jet in Sh2-284
provides evidence that protostellar jets scale with the mass of their parent
stars—the more massive the stellar engine driving the plasma, the larger the
resulting jet.
Image: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, Yu Cheng (NAOJ); Image
Processing: Joseph DePasquale (STScI)
This unique class of stellar
fireworks are highly collimated jets of plasma shooting out from newly forming
stars. Such jetted outflows are a star’s spectacular “birth announcement” to
the universe. Some of the infalling gas building up around the central star is
blasted along the star’s spin axis, likely under the influence of magnetic
fields.
Today, while hundreds of
protostellar jets have been observed, these are mainly from low-mass stars.
These spindle-like jets offer clues into the nature of newly forming stars. The
energetics, narrowness, and evolutionary time scales of protostellar jets all
serve to constrain models of the environment and physical properties of the
young star powering the outflow.
“I was really surprised at the
order, symmetry, and size of the jet when we first looked at it,” said
co-author Jonathan Tan of the University of Virginia in Charlottesville and
Chalmers University of Technology in Gothenburg, Sweden.
Its detection offers evidence that
protostellar jets must scale up with the mass of the star powering them. The
more massive the stellar engine propelling the plasma, the larger the gusher’s
size.
The jet’s detailed filamentary
structure, captured by Webb’s crisp resolution in infrared light, is evidence
the jet is plowing into interstellar dust and gas. This creates separate knots,
bow shocks, and linear chains.
The tips of the jet, lying in
opposite directions, encapsulate the history of the star’s formation.
“Originally the material was close into the star, but over 100,000 years the
tips were propagating out, and then the stuff behind is a younger outflow,” said
Tan.
Outlier
At nearly twice the distance from
the galactic center as our Sun, the host proto-cluster that’s home to the
voracious jet is on the periphery of our Milky Way galaxy.
Within the cluster, a few hundred
stars are still forming. Being in the galactic hinterlands means the stars are
deficient in heavier elements beyond hydrogen and helium. This is measured as
metallicity, which gradually increases over cosmic time as each passing stellar
generation expels end products of nuclear fusion through winds and supernovae.
The low metallicity of Sh2-284 is a reflection of its relatively pristine
nature, making it a local analog for the environments in the early universe
that were also deficient in heavier elements.
“Massive stars, like the one found
inside this cluster, have very important influences on the evolution of
galaxies. Our discovery is shedding light on the formation mechanism of massive
stars in low metallicity environments, so we can use this massive star as a
laboratory to study what was going on in earlier cosmic history,” said Cheng.
Unrolling Stellar Tapestry
Stellar jets, which are powered by
the gravitational energy released as a star grows in mass, encode the formation
history of the protostar.
“Webb’s new images are telling us
that the formation of massive stars in such environments could proceed via a
relatively stable disk around the star that is expected in theoretical models
of star formation known as core accretion,” said Tan. “Once we found a massive
star launching these jets, we realized we could use the Webb observations to
test theories of massive star formation. We developed new theoretical core
accretion models that were fit to the data, to basically tell us what kind of
star is in the center. These models imply that the star is about 10 times the
mass of the Sun and is still growing and has been powering this outflow.”
For more than 30 years, astronomers
have disagreed about how massive stars form. Some think a massive star requires
a very chaotic process, called competitive accretion.
In the competitive accretion model,
material falls in from many different directions so that the orientation of the
disk changes over time. The outflow is launched perpendicularly, above and
below the disk, and so would also appear to twist and turn in different
directions.
“However, what we’ve seen here,
because we’ve got the whole history – a tapestry of the story – is that the
opposite sides of the jets are nearly 180 degrees apart from each other. That
tells us that this central disk is held steady and validates a prediction of
the core accretion theory,” said Tan.
Where there’s one massive star,
there could be others in this outer frontier of the Milky Way. Other massive
stars may not yet have reached the point of firing off Roman-candle-style
outflows. Data from the Atacama Large Millimeter Array in Chile, also presented
in this study, has found another dense stellar core that could be in an earlier
stage of construction.
The paper has been accepted for
publication in The
Astrophysical Journal.
The James Webb Space Telescope is
the world’s premier space science observatory. Webb is solving mysteries in our
solar system, looking beyond to distant worlds around other stars, and probing
the mysterious structures and origins of our universe and our place in it. Webb
is an international program led by NASA with its partners, ESA (European Space
Agency) and CSA (Canadian Space Agency).
To learn more about Webb, visit: https://science.nasa.gov/webb
Source: NASA’s Webb Observes Immense Stellar Jet on Outskirts of Our Milky Way - NASA Science

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