The Flame Nebula, located about 1,400 light-years away from Earth, is a hotbed of star formation less than 1 million years old. Within the Flame Nebula, there are objects so small that their cores will never be able to fuse hydrogen like full-fledged stars—brown dwarfs.
Brown dwarfs, often called “failed
stars,” over time become very dim and much cooler than stars. These factors
make observing brown dwarfs with most telescopes difficult, if not impossible,
even at cosmically short distances from the Sun. When they are very young,
however, they are still relatively warmer and brighter and therefore easier to
observe despite the obscuring, dense dust and gas that comprises the Flame
Nebula in this case.
NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope
can pierce this dense, dusty region and see the faint infrared glow from young
brown dwarfs. A team of astronomers used this capability to explore the lowest
mass limit of brown dwarfs within the Flame Nebula. The result, they found,
were free-floating objects roughly two to three times the mass of Jupiter,
although they were sensitive down to 0.5 times the mass of Jupiter.
“The goal of this project was to
explore the fundamental low-mass limit of the star and brown dwarf formation
process. With Webb, we're able to probe the faintest and lowest mass objects,”
said lead study author Matthew De Furio of the University of Texas at Austin.
Image A: Flame Nebula: Hubble and Webb Observations
This collage of images from the Flame Nebula shows a
near-infrared light view from NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope on the left, while
the two insets at the right show the near-infrared view taken by NASA’s James
Webb Space Telescope. Much of the dark, dense gas and dust, as well as the
surrounding white clouds within the Hubble image, have been cleared in the Webb
images, giving us a view into a more translucent cloud pierced by the
infrared-producing objects within that are young stars and brown dwarfs. Astronomers
used Webb to take a census of the lowest-mass objects within this star-forming
region.
The Hubble image on the left represents light at wavelengths of 1.05 microns
(filter F105W) as blue, 1.3 microns (F130N) as green, and 1.39 microns (F129M)
as red. The two Webb images on the right represent light at wavelengths of 1.15
microns and 1.4 microns (filters F115W and F140M) as blue, 1.82 microns (F182M)
as green, 3.6 microns (F360M) as orange, and 4.3 microns (F430M) as red.
NASA, ESA, CSA, M. Meyer (University of Michigan), A.
Pagan (STScI)
Smaller Fragments
The low-mass limit the team sought
is set by a process called fragmentation. In this process large molecular clouds, from which both stars and brown dwarfs are born,
break apart into smaller and smaller units, or fragments.
Fragmentation is highly dependent
on several factors with the balance between temperature, thermal pressure, and
gravity being among the most important. More specifically, as fragments
contract under the force of gravity, their cores heat up. If a core is massive
enough, it will begin to fuse hydrogen. The outward pressure created by that
fusion counteracts gravity, stopping collapse and stabilizing the object (then
known as a star). However, fragments whose cores are not compact and hot enough
to burn hydrogen continue to contract as long as they radiate away their
internal heat.
“The cooling of these clouds is
important because if you have enough internal energy, it will fight that
gravity,” says Michael Meyer of the University of Michigan. “If the clouds cool
efficiently, they collapse and break apart.”
Fragmentation stops when a fragment
becomes opaque enough to reabsorb its own radiation, thereby stopping the
cooling and preventing further collapse. Theories placed the lower limit of
these fragments anywhere between one and ten Jupiter masses. This study
significantly shrinks that range as Webb’s census counted up fragments of
different masses within the nebula.
“As found in many previous studies,
as you go to lower masses, you actually get more objects up to about ten times
the mass of Jupiter. In our study with the James Webb Space Telescope, we are
sensitive down to 0.5 times the mass of Jupiter, and we are finding
significantly fewer and fewer things as you go below ten times the mass of
Jupiter,” De Furio explained. “We find fewer five-Jupiter-mass objects than
ten-Jupiter-mass objects, and we find way fewer three-Jupiter-mass objects than
five-Jupiter-mass objects. We don’t really find any objects below two or three
Jupiter masses, and we expect to see them if they are there, so we are
hypothesizing that this could be the limit itself.”
Meyer added, “Webb, for the first
time, has been able to probe up to and beyond that limit. If that limit is
real, there really shouldn’t be any one-Jupiter-mass objects free-floating out
in our Milky Way galaxy, unless they were formed as planets and then ejected
out of a planetary system.”
Image B: Low Mass Objects within
the Flame Nebula in Infrared Light
This near-infrared image of a portion of the Flame
Nebula from NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope highlights three low-mass
objects, seen in the insets to the right. These objects, which are much colder
than protostars, require the sensitivity of Webb’s instruments to detect them.
These objects were studied as part of an effort to explore the lowest mass
limit of brown dwarfs within the Flame Nebula.
The Webb images represent light at wavelengths of 1.15 microns and 1.4 microns
(filters F115W and F140M) as blue, 1.82 microns (F182M) as green, 3.6 microns
(F360M) as orange, and 4.3 microns (F430M) as red.
NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, M. Meyer (University of
Michigan)
Building on Hubble’s Legacy
Brown dwarfs, given the difficulty
of finding them, have a wealth of information to provide, particularly in star
formation and planetary research given their similarities to both stars and
planets. NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope has been on the hunt for these brown
dwarfs for decades.
Even though Hubble can’t observe
the brown dwarfs in the Flame Nebula to as low a mass as Webb can, it was
crucial in identifying candidates for further study. This study is an example
of how Webb took the baton—decades of Hubble data from the Orion Molecular
Cloud Complex—and enabled in-depth research.
“It's really difficult to do this
work, looking at brown dwarfs down to even ten Jupiter masses, from the ground,
especially in regions like this. And having existing Hubble data over the last
30 years or so allowed us to know that this is a really useful star-forming
region to target. We needed to have Webb to be able to study this particular
science topic,” said De Furio.
“It’s a quantum leap in our
capabilities between understanding what was going on from Hubble. Webb is
really opening an entirely new realm of possibilities, understanding these
objects,” explained astronomer Massimo Robberto of the Space Telescope Science
Institute.
This team is continuing to study
the Flame Nebula, using Webb’s spectroscopic tools to further characterize the
different objects within its dusty cocoon.
“There's a big overlap between the
things that could be planets and the things that are very, very low mass brown
dwarfs,” Meyer stated. “And that's our job in the next five years: to figure
out which is which and why.”
These results are accepted for
publication in The Astrophysical Journal Letters.
Image C (Animated): Flame Nebula
(Hubble and Webb Comparison)
This animated image alternates between a Hubble Space
Telescope and a James Webb Space Telescope observation of the Flame Nebula, a
nearby star-forming nebula less than 1 million years old. In this comparison,
three low-mass objects are highlighted. In Hubble’s observation, the low-mass
objects are hidden by the region’s dense dust and gas. However, the objects are
brought out in the Webb observation due to Webb's sensitivity to faint infrared
light.
NASA, ESA, CSA, Alyssa Pagan
(STScI)
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).
Source: NASA’s
Webb Peers Deeper into Mysterious Flame Nebula - NASA Science
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