Category Archives: starbirth

Starbirth: It’s Happening!

And Galaxies are Happenin’ Kinds of Places!

There are SO many interesting strands of astronomy research going on these days. I’m reminded of the complexity of it all every time I go to an AAS meeting or open up a week’s worth of press releases to see the latest news.  This past week I spent a couple of days at Jet Propulsion Laboratory, working with a team that’s putting together a set of exhibits for their visitor’s center. One of our discussions was about the topics we could illustrate that show spectacular “things” happening in the universe. Of course, galaxies are a hot research topic, what with their central supermassive black holes (that seem to be playing a bigger role in galaxy evolution than we used to think).  And, we know that galaxies are sites of star formation — which is followed (some millions or billions of years later) by star death.  Star birth and star death are also hot topics in research circles.  And, so you can see that our discussion could get pretty complex — do we show starbirth? Star death? And what about planets?  Lots of those show up in galaxies, too (at least, in the Milky Way they do, and there’s no reason to think that they don’t exist in other galaxies, as well).  Well, we ended up selecting images that show all of those topics in a sort of iconic way.

Star formation in an oddball galaxy. Courtesy Space Telescope Science Institute (click to galacticate).

During the two days I was at JPL, the Hubble Space Telescope’s latest image was released.  It’s a portion of a galaxy (called NGC 2976) that is undergoing bursts of star formation.  Now, normally, you see lots of star formation in spiral galaxies — but if you look closely at this image, you don’t see the typical spiral arms where star-forming regions. this galaxy’s a bit of a strange one because it forms stars but doesn’t really have the look and feel of a spiral where such things are common.

You can spot dusty filaments running through the disk, but those really aren’t spiral arms.  It’s amost like something disrupted what was once a spiral galaxy, roughed it up a bit, caused bursts of star formation, and then things quieted down — leaving the formerly active starbirth regions  (the blue areas) filled with hot, massive young stars.

So, what happened here?  This galaxy had the bad luck to run afoul of some neighboring massive galaxies. The gravitational effect of the interaction stripped away some gas (which is an important ingredient in star formation) and then channeled gas to the galaxy’s inner region.  That compressed gas in the inner area spurred a spate of starbirth that began about  500 million years ago.  The outer regions didn’t have enough gas to form new stars, so you don’t see any regions of starbirth out there.

Now, as it turns out, the inner disk is just almost out of gas. This is because all the star-forming activity has has “eaten” up the available star-forming stuff.  When astrononomers look at this galaxy, they now see a small region of hot new stars and starbirth crêches near the center, and nothing but stars in the rest of the galaxy.

The blue dots in the image are the young blue giant stars residing in the remaining active star-birth regions. They’ll start to die in perhaps tens of millions of years (as opposed to the Sun, which will live about 10 BILLION years), creating gorgeous supernova remnants — which will seed the galaxy with the material for the next generation of stars. For those of you who are stargazers, NGC 2976 is part of the M81 group of galaxies. They lie about 12 million light-years away in the constellation Ursa Major.

More Starbirth Than You Can Shake a Telescope At

Hubble Peers Into a Stellar Nursery

R136 in the Large Magellanic Cloud, courtesy of Hubble Space Telescope. Click to embiggen.
R136 in the Large Magellanic Cloud, courtesy of Hubble Space Telescope. Click to embiggen.

Every time I turn around, Hubble Space Telescope is looking at another fantastic place in the cosmos. This time, it’s a massive region of starbirth, where gigantic hot young newborn stars are crowded together in an area where there are even MORE stars are still being  created.

The scene that Hubble imaged is 30 Doradus, a starbirth nursery that’s wracked with the turbulent winds and activity that accompany the births of stars in close quarters.  The hot blue stars you see in this image are part of a cluster called R136. They are but a few million years old and lie about 170,000 light-years away in the neighboring Large Magellanic Cloud (a companion galaxy to the Milky Way).

Many of these icy blue stars are among the most massive stars known. Several of them are over 100 times more massive than our Sun.  They may look pretty now, but in a few million years, they will have spent their nuclear fuel and will start to pop off like firecrackers in giant supernova explosions.

The clouds surrounding these stars are being carved away by relentless and prodigious amounts of ultraviolet radiation and stellar winds pouring off the hot young stellar beauties.  That action is etching away at the enveloping hydrogen gas cloud in which the stars were born — and, in the process, in some places it may well be choking off the materials that other stars that need to form in the future.

Now, the stellar winds and radiation aren’t the only action going on here. The motion of the Large Magellanic Cloud itself may have played a huge role in starting the whole star-birth process in 30 Doradus.  First, the gravitational tug of the Milky Way and the companion Small Magellanic Cloud may have acted together to push the gas clouds in the LMC together.  You need highly compressed clouds of gas and dust to start the stellar nursery chugging away cranking out new stars.

It’s also likely that when the Large Magellanic Cloud plowed through the halo of the Milky Way in the distant past, that action could also have compressed clouds of gas and dust, setting the stage for star formation. As fascinating as this is because it’s happening relatively near to our galaxy, this same scene has played itself out many times through out the early history of the universe. In distant regions where galaxies have collided, massive clusters like R136 are common and this tells us that glaaxy interactions are a great spur to star birth.  This image is a great example of studying something close to us that gives us great insight into something that happened in galaxies long ago and far, far away.