Artist's conception of the Milky Way galaxy
Image: Nick Risinger
An artist's rendition of the Milky Way, overlaid with results from the
survey of early star-forming clouds. Each dot represents a dark cloud of
dense gas and dust in the process of collapsing to give rise to a
future cluster of stars. Most of these regions map onto the galaxy's
spiral arms. (Artist's rendering: R. Hurt: NASA/JPL-Caltech/SSC)
In this artist's conception, observers peer through the dark dust of a
star-forming cloud to witness the birth of a star. The survey by Yancy
Shirley and his group catalogued and mapped such regions in their
earliest phases, when the gas and dust in the star-forming clouds are
just beginning to coalesce. (Image: NASA)
A UA-led group of astronomers has completed the largest-ever survey of
dense gas clouds in the Milky Way – pockets shrouded in gas and dust
where new stars are being born.
A team of astronomers led by Yancy Shirley at the University of Arizona's Steward Observatory has completed the largest-ever survey of dense gas clouds in the Milky Way – pockets shrouded in gas and dust where new stars are being born. Cataloging and mapping more than 6,000 gas clouds, the survey allows astronomers to better understand the earliest phases of star formation.
"All the famous, major regions of star formation in our galaxy have been studied in great detail," Shirley said. "But we know very little about what happens in those star-less clumps before proto-stars form, and where."
A team of astronomers led by Yancy Shirley at the University of Arizona's Steward Observatory has completed the largest-ever survey of dense gas clouds in the Milky Way – pockets shrouded in gas and dust where new stars are being born. Cataloging and mapping more than 6,000 gas clouds, the survey allows astronomers to better understand the earliest phases of star formation.
"When you look at the Milky Way on a clear summer night, you'll notice
it's not a continuous stream of stars," said Shirley. "Instead, you'll
notice all those little dark patches where there seem to be no stars.
But those regions are not devoid of stars – they're dark clouds
containing dust and gas, the raw material from which stars and planets
are forming in our Milky Way today."
According to Shirley, the survey is a major step forward in astronomy
because it allows astronomers to study the earliest phases of star
formation when the gas and dust in the star-forming clouds are just
beginning to coalesce, before giving rise to clusters of stars. He
explained that much of the research over the last 30 to 40 years has
been very targeted towards regions where prospective stars, called
proto-stars, have already begun to take shape.
"All the famous, major regions of star formation in our galaxy have been studied in great detail," Shirley said. "But we know very little about what happens in those star-less clumps before proto-stars form, and where."
The survey provides the first unbiased map of the galaxy that shows
where all those regions are throughout the galaxy, in different galactic
environments and at different evolutionary stages. This helps
astronomers better understand how the properties of these regions change
as star formation progresses.
"Starless clumps have only been detected in small numbers to date,"
Shirley said. "Now, for the first time, we have seen this earliest phase
of star formation, before a cluster actually forms, in large numbers in
an unbiased way."
According to the UA astronomer, the star formation rate in the Milky
Way was higher in the past, and currently stars form on the order of
about one solar mass per year.
How long does it take to become a full-blown star?
"That is something we hope to be able to calculate by comparing the
number of sources that are in that early phase to the number of sources
that are in a later phase," Shirley explained. "The ratio between the
two tells you how long each phase lasts. In our survey there seem to be
fewer regions that have not yet begun forming stars than those that
have, which tells us the earlier phase must be shorter. If that phase
lasted much longer, there should be many more of those."
Because the dense accumulations of dust are impervious to light in the
visible spectrum, astronomers can't observe them with telescopes
detecting light in the visible spectrum such as the Hubble Space
Telescope.
"For those of us who want to study how stars form, that's a real
problem because if we want to observe a young star or a cluster of stars
forming in one of those dark clouds, all that dust gets in the way,"
said Shirley.
However, it turns out the same dust that blocks visible light actually
glows at long wavelengths, specifically radio wavelengths, which are
about a million times longer than visible light.
"Heat emanating from the young clusters of stars forming inside the
clouds, combined with ambient radiation and even starlight from the
surrounding galaxy, all that heats up those dust grains just a little
bit above absolute zero," Shirley said. "As a result they glow, allowing
us to peer inside the clouds with a radio telescope at very long
wavelengths."
For their survey, which covers all parts of the galactic plane visible
from the northern hemisphere, the group used the Sub-Millimeter
Telescope at the Arizona Radio Observatory, equipped with a sensitive
new receiver. Shirley said the proximity and accessibility of the
UA-operated telescope made this project possible in the first place.
The survey, published
in The Astrophysical Journal, resulted from a group effort including
Wayne Schlingman, who completed his PhD at the UA last year and is now
postdoctoral researcher at the University of Colorado Boulder; Brian
Svoboda, a current doctoral student in the UA's Department of Astronomy, and Tim Ellsworth-Bowers, a current doctoral student at the University of Colorado Boulder and former UA graduate.
"Almost everybody on the team that put this all together has a
connection to the UA," said Shirley, who himself graduated from the UA's
department of astronomy before returning to join the faculty. Source: University of Arizona
Contacts
Source contact:
Yancy Shirley
520-626-3666
yancyshirley@gmail.com
UANews contact:
Daniel Stolte
520-626-4402
stolte@email.arizona.edu