Nature likes spirals – from the whirlpool of a hurricane, to pinwheel-shaped protoplanetary disks around newborn stars, to the vast realms of spiral galaxies across our universe.
Now astronomers are bemused to find young
stars that are spiraling into the center of a massive cluster of stars in the
Small Magellanic Cloud, a satellite galaxy of the Milky Way.
The outer arm of the spiral in this huge,
oddly shaped stellar nursery called NGC 346 may be feeding star formation in a
river-like motion of gas and stars. This is an efficient way to fuel star
birth, researchers say.
The massive star cluster NGC 346, located in the Small Magellanic Cloud,
has long intrigued astronomers with its unusual shape. Now researchers using
two separate methods have determined that this shape is partly due to stars and
gas spiraling into the center of this cluster in a river-like motion. The red
spiral superimposed on NGC 346 traces the movement of stars and gas toward the
center. Scientists say this spiraling motion is the most efficient way to feed
star formation from the outside toward the center of the cluster. Credits:
Illustration: NASA, ESA, Andi James (STScI)
The Small Magellanic Cloud has a simpler chemical composition than the
Milky Way, making it similar to the galaxies found in the younger universe,
when heavier elements were more scarce. Because of this, the stars in the Small
Magellanic Cloud burn hotter and so run out of their fuel faster than in our
Milky Way.
Though a proxy for the early universe, at 200,000 light-years away the
Small Magellanic Cloud is also one of our closest galactic neighbors.
Learning how stars form in the Small Magellanic Cloud offers a new twist on
how a firestorm of star birth may have occurred early in the universe's
history, when it was undergoing a "baby boom" about 2 to 3 billion
years after the big bang (the universe is now 13.8 billion years old).
"The Hubble archive is really a gold mine. There
are so many interesting star-forming regions that Hubble has observed over the
years. Given that Hubble is performing so well, we can actually repeat these
observations. This can really advance our understanding of star
formation."
--Elena Sabbi, STScI
The new results find that the process of star formation there is similar to
that in our own Milky Way.
Only 150 light-years in diameter, NGC 346 boasts the mass of 50,000 Suns.
Its intriguing shape and rapid star formation rate has puzzled astronomers. It
took the combined power of NASA's Hubble Space Telescope and the European
Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope (VLT) to unravel the behavior of
this mysterious-looking stellar nesting ground.
"Stars are the machines that sculpt the universe. We would not have
life without stars, and yet we don't fully understand how they form,"
explained study leader Elena Sabbi of the Space Telescope Science Institute in
Baltimore. "We have several models that make predictions, and some of
these predictions are contradictory. We want to determine what is regulating
the process of star formation, because these are the laws that we need to also
understand what we see in the early universe."
Researchers determined the motion of the stars in NGC 346 in two different
ways. Using Hubble, Sabbi and her team measured the changes of the stars'
positions over 11 years. The stars in this region are moving at an average
velocity of 2,000 miles per hour, which means that in 11 years they move 200
million miles. This is about 2 times the distance between the Sun and the
Earth.
But this cluster is relatively far away, inside a neighboring galaxy. This
means the amount of observed motion is very small and therefore difficult to
measure. These extraordinarily precise observations were possible only because
of Hubble's exquisite resolution and high sensitivity. Also, Hubble's three-decade-long
history of observations provides a baseline for astronomers to follow minute
celestial motions over time.
The second team, led by Peter Zeidler of AURA/STScI for the European Space
Agency, used the ground-based VLT's Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE)
instrument to measure radial velocity, which determines whether an object is
approaching or receding from an observer.
"What was really amazing is that we used two completely different
methods with different facilities and basically came to the same conclusion,
independent of each other," said Zeidler. "With Hubble, you can see
the stars, but with MUSE we can also see the gas motion in the third dimension,
and it confirms the theory that everything is spiraling inwards."
But why a spiral?
"A spiral is really the good, natural way to feed star formation from
the outside toward the center of the cluster," explained Zeidler.
"It's the most efficient way that stars and gas fueling more star
formation can move towards the center."
Half of the Hubble data for this study of NGC 346 is archival. The first
observations were taken 11 years ago. They were recently repeated to trace the
motion of the stars over time. Given the telescope's longevity, the Hubble data
archive now contains more than 32 years of astronomical data powering
unprecedented, long-term studies.
"The Hubble archive is really a gold mine," said Sabbi.
"There are so many interesting star-forming regions that Hubble has
observed over the years. Given that Hubble is performing so well, we can
actually repeat these observations. This can really advance our understanding
of star formation."
The teams' findings appear Sept. 8 in The Astrophysical
Journal.
Observations with NASA's James Webb Space Telescope should be able to resolve lower-mass stars in the cluster, giving a more holistic view of the region. Over Webb's lifespan, astronomers will be able to repeat this experiment and measure the motion of the low-mass stars. They could then compare the high-mass stars and the low-mass stars to finally learn the full extent of the dynamics of this nursery.
Nature likes spirals – from the whirlpool of a hurricane, to pinwheel-shaped protoplanetary disks around newborn stars, to the vast realms of spiral galaxies across our universe. Now astronomers are bemused to find young stars that are spiraling into the center of a massive cluster of stars in the Small Magellanic Cloud, a satellite galaxy of the Milky Way. Credits: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center; Lead Producer: Paul Morris
The Hubble Space Telescope is a project of international cooperation between NASA and ESA. NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, manages the telescope. The Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) in Baltimore conducts Hubble science operations. STScI is operated for NASA by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, in Washington, D.C.
Source: Hubble Finds Spiraling Stars, Providing Window into Early Universe | NASA
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