First steps of stellar formation unravelled

Discussion in 'Astronomy, Exobiology, & Cosmology' started by thed, Jan 15, 2002.

  1. thed IT Gopher Registered Senior Member

    Messages:
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    University of California-Berkeley

    Media Contacts:
    Robert Sanders
    (510) 643-6998, (510) 642-3734
    rls@pa.urel.berkeley.edu

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Wednesday, January 09, 2002

    Radio mapping of molecular clouds in nearby spiral galaxy helps astronomers
    unravel first steps in how stars form

    By Robert Sanders, Media Relations

    The first-ever map of all sites of star formation in a spiral galaxy
    reveals the important role played in the earliest steps of star formation
    by magnetic fields in the gas between stars.

    The star formation areas, known as giant molecular clouds, should be
    rotating rapidly, spinning up as they collapse like spinning ice skaters
    drawing in their arms. Surprisingly, most are spinning between one and
    10 percent of their expected rate, and many are rotating backward, said
    Leo Blitz, professor of astronomy and director of the University of
    California, Berkeley's Radio Astronomy Laboratory.

    "We expected to see slower rotation than classical theories of star
    formation predict, but I was surprised that the effect was so very,
    very strong," said Erik Rosolowsky, a graduate student at UC Berkeley.
    "Magnetic field interactions within the forming clouds are the only
    thing that could explain this."

    This report is being presented today (Jan. 9) at the American
    Astronomical Society Meeting in Washington, D.C., by Rosolowsky, Blitz,
    Greg Engargiola and Richard Plambeck -- all from UC Berkeley.

    All of the stars in the Milky Way, including the Sun and the solar
    system, plus the stars in neighboring galaxies, were made in giant
    clouds of molecular hydrogen (H2) and other molecules. Like raindrops
    forming in the clouds of Earth's atmosphere, the stars form by
    accreting gas from the cloud.

    When the stars ignite, the released energy rips the molecular cloud
    apart, revealing the newborn stars. Although rapid progress is being
    made on how individual stars form inside molecular clouds, Blitz said,
    little is known about how the giant molecular clouds themselves form.
    An understanding of how the birthplaces of stars come about is an
    important missing link in the star formation process.

    The UC Berkeley astronomers reasoned that, if they could obtain a
    complete census of the star-forming molecular clouds in a galaxy,
    the cloud properties would illuminate the earliest phases of cloud
    formation. The survey presented today is the first such census of any
    spiral galaxy. A similar census in the Milky Way is impossible because
    of our vantage point within the galaxy -- it's like being unable to
    see an entire city while surrounded by tall buildings.

    The observations targeted M33 (the Triangulum galaxy), a spiral galaxy
    similar to, but smaller than the Milky Way. Like the Milky Way, M33
    is one of three large spiral galaxies in the local group of galaxies,
    lying more than 2.7 million light years from Earth.

    Using the Berkeley-Illinois-Maryland Association (BIMA) Array, a
    state-of-the-art array of 10 radio telescopes operating at millimeter
    wavelengths, the astronomers were able to produce a radio image of
    most of the galaxy. The image shows almost all of the sites of star
    formation in M33. The individual 6 meter (20 ft.) telescopes are
    linked together electronically to function as a single large telescope,
    which makes it possible to discern much finer detail than can be seen
    with each telescope alone.

    The astronomers tuned the telescope to observe emission from carbon
    monoxide. Carbon monoxide is a pollutant on Earth, but is an essential
    tracer for locating molecular hydrogen (H2) in space. Emission from
    molecular hydrogen itself is undetectable at the cold temperatures of
    the giant molecular clouds, typically about 10 degrees Celsius above
    absolute zero. Astronomers turn to observations of molecules like
    carbon monoxide as well as water, ammonia, alcohol, vinegar and sugars
    to trace the molecular hydrogen.

    The results presented today come from using the BIMA Array to map a
    region of M33 about the size of the full moon. Nearly every giant
    molecular cloud in M33 within the survey region was detected, and the
    clouds have sizes and shapes similar to those found in our own galaxy.

    Moreover, astronomers can use the array to measure how rapidly the
    clouds are spinning. The spins provide important clues for unraveling
    how they form. Most theories predict that giant molecular clouds form
    from gas spread over a large region in the galaxy. As this slowly
    spinning gas collapses into a dense cloud, the rotation speeds up.
    This is the same process by which skaters increase their rate of spin
    by bringing arms and legs closer to the body.

    Surprisingly, the astronomers found that the clouds typically are
    spinning between 10 and 100 times slower than expected from this simple
    picture. Almost half of the clouds are rotating in a direction opposite
    to that of the very diffuse gas from which the clouds are produced.

    "The situation we've observed is impossible unless something is slowing
    the clouds down as they form," Rosolowsky said.

    "The most likely explanation is that the clouds are magnetized and tied
    to the rest of the gas in the galaxy," said Blitz. Large scale magnetic
    fields would slow the rotation, just as a giant rubber band tied
    between a desk and an office chair would slow a person spinning in the
    chair. Ultimately, enough energy can be stored in the magnetic fields
    to get the clouds to spin backwards. Direct evidence will require
    measurements of the magnetic fields with other specialized instruments.

    Blitz said that only a tiny proportion of gas in the molecular cloud --
    only one in 10 million atoms in the densest part of the cloud -- is
    charged and thus tied to the magnetic field. Nevertheless, that is
    sufficient for the magnetic field to slow down rotation of the
    molecular cloud.

    "It's the tail wagging the dog," he said.

    The team plans in the future to look at the relationship between areas
    of molecular clouds in M33 with areas of diffuse gas from which the
    clouds form.

    This work was supported by the National Science Foundation and by
    research funds from the State of California.

    # # #


    Additional Resources:

    Leo Blitz, (510) 643-3000, blitz@astro.berkeley.edu
    Erik Rosolowsky, (510) 642-5902, eros@astro.berkeley.edu
    Greg Engargiola, (510) 642-9057, greg@astro.berkeley.edu
    Richard Plambeck, (510) 642-3441, plambeck@astro.berkeley.edu

    Web Links to additional Information:

    An image of the spiral galaxy M33, called Triangulum, with molecular
    clouds superimposed is available on the Web at
    http://astron.berkeley.edu/~eros/press/

    IMAGE CAPTION:
    Observations of the Triangulum galaxy at millimeter wavelengths reveal
    the sites of star formation in the galaxy (orange). The background image
    is the galaxy as it appears in visible light. The star formation sites
    were discovered using the Berkeley-Illlinois-Maryland Association
    Millimeter Array. These results were presented to the American
    Astronomical Society meeting in Washington, DC on January 9, 2002.
    PHOTO CREDIT: Erik Rosolowsky, UC Berkeley and Space Telescope Science
    Institute.
     

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