The cool wind of galaxy M82 drives gas and dust up to
40,000 light-years from its core, as shown here using data from NASA’s Chandra
X-ray Observatory and Hubble and Spitzer space telescopes. The inset shows a
Chandra view of the galaxy’s central region, where a cauldron of stellar
activity kick-starts the larger-scale outflow.
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center; X-ray:
NASA/CXC/JHU/D.Strickland; Optical: NASA/ESA/STScI/AURA/The Hubble Heritage
Team; Infrared: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Univ. of AZ/C. Engelbracht; XRISM
Collaboration et al. 2026
For the first time, astronomers have
directly measured the speed of superheated gas billowing from a cauldron of
stellar activity at the heart of M82, a nearby galaxy undergoing an
extraordinary burst of star formation.
The material is moving more than 2
million miles (over 3 million kilometers) per hour and appears to be the
primary force driving a cooler, well-studied, galaxy-scale wind.
Researchers made the calculations using
data from the Resolve instrument aboard the XRISM (X-ray Imaging and Spectroscopy
Mission) spacecraft.
“The classic model of starburst galaxies
like M82 suggests that shock waves from star formation and supernovae near the
center heat gas, kick-starting a powerful wind,” said Erin Boettcher, an
astrophysicist at the University of Maryland, College Park and
NASA’s Goddard
Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. “Prior to
XRISM, though, we didn’t have the ability to measure the velocities needed to
test that hypothesis. Now we see the gas moving even faster than some models
predict, more than enough to drive the wind all the way to the edge of the
galaxy.”
A paper about the result, led by
Boettcher, published Wednesday, March 25, in Nature. The XRISM mission is led
by JAXA (Japan Aerospace Exploration
Agency) in collaboration with NASA, along
with contributions from ESA (European Space Agency). NASA and JAXA also
codeveloped the Resolve instrument.
This image of M82, captured by the Near-Infrared
Camera aboard NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope, shows the center of the galaxy
in such detail that astronomers can distinguish small bright sources that are
either individual stars or star clusters.
NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, Alberto Bolatto (UMD)
Sometimes called the Cigar galaxy, M82 is located 12 million light-years away in the northern
constellation Ursa Major. Astronomers classify it as a starburst galaxy because
it’s forming stars at a much higher rate than typical for its size — about 10
times faster than the Milky Way.
M82 is well known for its extended, cool wind, which stretches out to 40,000
light-years and propels huge quantities of gas and dust. Scientists have
studied it with many missions, including NASA’s Chandra, Webb, Hubble, and retired Spitzer space telescopes, trying to
connect the dots between the stellar activity and the large-scale outflow.
Researchers particularly want to
understand the role of cosmic rays. These high-speed charged particles are found throughout the cosmos and
are accelerated by some of the same events scientists think produce winds like
in M82. There’s a possibility they are a main source of outward pressure on the
gas.
The XRISM Resolve instrument’s high
resolution and sensitivity allowed Boettcher and her colleagues to accurately
measure the speed of the hot wind by looking at an X-ray signal from
superheated iron in the galactic center.
The amount of X-ray light from iron and
other elements told them the temperature — right within predictions at 45
million degrees Fahrenheit (25 million degrees Celsius). The heat exerts
pressure on the gas and pushes it outward. This rushing from high pressure to
low pressure forms the wind — the same reason winds blow through Earth’s
atmosphere.
The Resolve instrument aboard the XRISM (X-ray Imaging
and Spectroscopy Mission) spacecraft captured data revealing the velocity of
the hot wind at the center of starburst galaxy M82. The energy range of iron
emission lines show that the gas moves around 2 million miles (about 3 million
kilometers) per hour. Inset: XRISM Xtend instrument’s image of M82.
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, JAXA/NASA, XRISM
Collaboration et al. 2026
The broadness of iron spectral lines
conveyed the hot wind’s speed. This works through Doppler shifting, the same
phenomenon that causes the pitch of a sound, like a siren, to rise or fall due
to the source’s motion toward or away from you. In the case of M82, the hot
material near the center flies quickly in both directions, stretching out the
iron’s spectral line. The amount of stretching reveals the iron’s velocity. The
researchers found that the wind is a little faster than expected. Combined with
the high temperature, it’s powerful enough to produce the cool wind without
cosmic rays, although they may still be contributing.
The researchers calculate that the
center of M82 expels enough gas every year to form seven stars with the mass of
our Sun. This presents another puzzle.
“If the wind blows steadily at the speed
we’ve measured, then we think it can power the larger, cooler wind by driving
out four solar masses of gas a year. But XRISM tells us much more gas is moving
outward,” said co-author Edmund Hodges-Kluck, an astronomer and XRISM team
member at NASA Goddard. “Where do the three extra solar masses go? Do they
escape out of the galaxy as hot gas some other way? We don’t know.”
This animation shows the difference between iron-25’s
spectral line in a laboratory setting compared to XRISM’s observations from the
center of M82. The M82 line is broader than the lab version due to Doppler
shifting, which is the same phenomenon that causes the pitch of a sound to rise
or fall due to the source’s motion toward or away from you. In the case of M82,
the hot material near the center flies quickly in both directions, stretching
out the iron spectral line. The amount of stretch tells scientists the iron’s
velocity.
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, JAXA/NASA, XRISM
Collaboration et al. 2026
The XRISM satellite’s observations of
M82 will help improve models of starburst galaxies, which may help scientists
answer these types of questions in the future. NASA’s contributions to
international projects like XRISM are part of the agency’s efforts to innovate
with ambitious science missions that will help us better understand how our
cosmos works.
“Some of our early models of starburst
galaxies were developed in the 1980s, and we’re finally able to test them in
ways that weren’t possible before XRISM,” said co-author Skylar Grayson, a
graduate student at Arizona State University in
Tempe. “It provides opportunities to figure out why the model might not be
capturing everything that’s going on in the real universe.”
By Jeanette Kazmierczak
NASA’s
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
Source: NASA-JAXA’s XRISM Telescope Clocks Hot Wind of Galaxy M82 - NASA Science



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