Follow-up research on a 2023 image of the Sagittarius C stellar nursery in the heart of our Milky Way galaxy, captured by NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope, has revealed ejections from still-forming protostars and insights into the impact of strong magnetic fields on interstellar gas and the life cycle of stars.
“A big question in the Central
Molecular Zone of our galaxy has been, if there is so much dense gas and cosmic
dust here, and we know that stars form in such clouds, why are so few stars
born here?” said astrophysicist John Bally of the University of Colorado
Boulder, one of the principal investigators. “Now, for the first time, we are
seeing directly that strong magnetic fields may play an important role in
suppressing star formation, even at small scales.”
Detailed study of stars in this
crowded, dusty region has been limited, but Webb’s advanced near-infrared
instruments have allowed astronomers to see through the clouds to study young
stars like never before.
“The extreme environment of the
galactic center is a fascinating place to put star formation theories to the
test, and the infrared capabilities of NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope
provide the opportunity to build on past important observations from ground-based
telescopes like ALMA and MeerKAT,” said Samuel Crowe, another principal investigator on the research, a
senior undergraduate at the University of Virginia and a 2025 Rhodes Scholar.
Bally and Crowe each led a paper published in The Astrophysical
Journal.
Image A: Milky Way Center (MeerKAT
and Webb)
An image of the Milky Way captured by the MeerKAT
(formerly the Karoo Array Telescope) radio telescope array puts the James Webb
Space Telescope’s image of the Sagittarius C region in context. Like a
super-long exposure photograph, MeerKAT shows the bubble-like remnants of
supernovas that exploded over millennia, capturing the dynamic nature of the
Milky Way’s chaotic core. At the center of the MeerKAT image the region
surrounding the Milky Way’s supermassive black hole blazes bright. Huge
vertical filamentary structures echo those captured on a smaller scale by Webb
in Sagittarius C’s blue-green hydrogen cloud.
NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, SARAO, Samuel Crowe (UVA), John
Bally (CU), Ruben Fedriani (IAA-CSIC), Ian Heywood (Oxford)
Image B: Milky Way Center (MeerKAT
and Webb), Labeled
The star-forming region Sagittarius C, captured by the
James Webb Space Telescope, is about 200 light-years from the Milky Way’s
central supermassive black hole, Sagittarius A*. The spectral index at the
lower left shows how color was assigned to the radio data to create the image.
On the negative end, there is non-thermal emission, stimulated by electrons
spiraling around magnetic field lines. On the positive side, thermal emission
is coming from hot, ionized plasma. For Webb, color is assigned by shifting the
infrared spectrum to visible light colors. The shortest infrared wavelengths
are bluer, and the longer wavelengths appear more red.
NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, SARAO, Samuel Crowe (UVA), John
Bally (CU), Ruben Fedriani (IAA-CSIC), Ian Heywood (Oxford)
Using Infrared to Reveal Forming
Stars
In Sagittarius C’s brightest
cluster, the researchers confirmed the tentative finding from the Atacama Large
Millimeter Array (ALMA) that two massive stars are forming there. Along with
infrared data from NASA’s retired Spitzer Space Telescope and SOFIA (Stratospheric
Observatory for Infrared Astronomy) mission, as well as the Herschel Space
Observatory, they used Webb to determine that each of the massive protostars is
already more than 20 times the mass of the Sun. Webb also revealed the bright
outflows powered by each protostar.
Even more challenging is finding
low-mass protostars, still shrouded in cocoons of cosmic dust. Researchers
compared Webb’s data with ALMA’s past observations to identify five likely
low-mass protostar candidates.
The team also identified 88
features that appear to be shocked hydrogen gas, where material being blasted
out in jets from young stars impacts the surrounding gas cloud. Analysis of
these features led to the discovery of a new star-forming cloud, distinct from
the main Sagittarius C cloud, hosting at least two protostars powering their
own jets.
“Outflows from forming stars in
Sagittarius C have been hinted at in past observations, but this is the first
time we’ve been able to confirm them in infrared light. It’s very exciting to
see, because there is still a lot we don’t know about star formation,
especially in the Central Molecular Zone, and it’s so important to how the
universe works,” said Crowe.
Magnetic Fields and Star Formation
Webb’s 2023 image of Sagittarius C showed dozens of distinctive filaments in a region
of hot hydrogen plasma surrounding the main star-forming cloud. New analysis by
Bally and his team has led them to hypothesize that the filaments are shaped by
magnetic fields, which have also been observed in the past by the ground-based
observatories ALMA and MeerKAT (formerly the Karoo Array Telescope).
“The motion of gas swirling in the
extreme tidal forces of the Milky Way’s supermassive black hole, Sagittarius
A*, can stretch and amplify the surrounding magnetic fields. Those fields, in
turn, are shaping the plasma in Sagittarius C,” said Bally.
The researchers think that the
magnetic forces in the galactic center may be strong enough to keep the plasma
from spreading, instead confining it into the concentrated filaments seen in
the Webb image. These strong magnetic fields may also resist the gravity that
would typically cause dense clouds of gas and dust to collapse and forge stars,
explaining Sagittarius C’s lower-than-expected star formation rate.
“This is an exciting area for
future research, as the influence of strong magnetic fields, in the center of
our galaxy or other galaxies, on stellar ecology has not been fully
considered,” said Crowe.
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 Webb Explores Effect of Strong Magnetic Fields on Star Formation - NASA Science
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