Managed by NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory through launch, Webb’s Mid-Infrared Instrument also revealed jets of gas flowing into space from the twin stars.
Scientists recently got a big surprise
from NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope when they turned the observatory toward a group of young stars
called WL 20. The region has been studied since the 1970s with at least five
telescopes, but it took Webb’s unprecedented resolution and specialized
instruments to reveal that what researchers long thought was one of the stars,
WL 20S, is actually a pair that formed about 2 million to 4 million years ago.
The discovery was made using Webb’s Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI) and was presented at the 244th meeting of the American Astronomical Society on June
12. MIRI also found that the twins have matching jets of gas streaming into
space from their north and south poles.
“Our jaws dropped,” said astronomer Mary
Barsony, lead author of a new paper describing the results. “After studying
this source for decades, we thought we knew it pretty well. But without MIRI we
would not have known this was two stars or that these jets existed. That’s really astonishing.
It’s like having brand new eyes.”
This artist’s concept shows two young stars nearing
the end of their formation. Encircling the stars are disks of leftover gas and
dust from which planets may form. Jets of gas shoot away from the stars’ north
and south poles.
The team got another surprise when additional observations by the Atacama
Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA), a group of more than 60 radio
antennas in Chile, revealed that disks of dust and gas encircle both stars.
Based on the stars’ age, it’s possible that planets are forming in those disks.
The combined results indicate that
the twin stars are nearing the end of this early period of their lives, which
means scientists will have the opportunity to learn more about how the stars
transition from youth into adulthood.
“The power of these two telescopes
together is really incredible,” said Mike Ressler, project scientist for MIRI
at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory and co-author of the new study. “If we
hadn’t seen that these were two stars, the ALMA results might have just looked
like a single disk with a gap in the middle. Instead, we have new data about
two stars that are clearly at a critical point in their lives, when the
processes that formed them are petering out.”
This image of the WL 20 star group combines data from the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array and the Mid-Infrared Instrument on NASA’s Webb telescope. Gas jets emanating from the poles of twin stars appear blue and green; disks of dust and gas surrounding the stars are pink. U.S. NSF; NSF NRAO; ALMA; NASA/JPL-Caltech; B. Saxton
Stellar Jets
WL 20 resides in a much
larger, well-studied star-forming region of the Milky Way galaxy called Rho Ophiuchi, a massive cloud of gas and dust about 400 light-years from Earth. In fact, WL 20
is hidden behind thick clouds of gas and dust that block most of the visible
light (wavelengths that the human eye can detect) from the stars there. Webb
detects slightly longer wavelengths, called infrared, that can pass through
those layers. MIRI detects the longest infrared wavelengths of any instrument
on Webb and is thus well equipped for peering into obscured star-forming
regions like WL 20.
Radio waves can often penetrate
dust as well, though they may not reveal the same features as infrared light.
The disks of gas and dust surrounding the two stars in WL 20S emit light in a
range that astronomers call submillimeter; these, too, penetrate the
surrounding gas clouds and were observed by ALMA.
These four images show the WL 20 star system as seen
by (from left) NASA’s Infrared Telescope Facility at the Mauna Kea Observatory,
the Hale 5.0-meter telescope the Palomar Observatory, the Keck II telescope,
and the NASA’s Webb telescope and the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter
Array.
But scientists could easily have interpreted those observations as evidence
of a single disk with a gap in it had MIRI not also observed the two stellar
jets. The jets of gas are composed of ions, or individual atoms with some
electrons stripped away that radiate in mid-infrared wavelengths but not at
submillimeter wavelengths. Only an infrared instrument with spatial and
spectral resolution like MIRI’s could see them.
ALMA can also observe clouds of
leftover formation material around young stars. Composed of whole molecules,
like carbon monoxide, these clouds of gas and dust radiate light at these
longer wavelengths. The absence of those clouds in the ALMA observations shows
that the stars are beyond their initial formation phase.
“It’s amazing that this region still has so much to teach us about the life cycle of stars,” said Ressler. “I’m thrilled to see what else Webb will reveal.”
Source: NASA’s Webb Reveals Long-Studied Star Is Actually Twins - NASA
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