BBC Sky at Night Magazine

Where do baby stars come from?

The galactic environmen­t could affect how infant stars grow

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Star formation is one of my favourite mysteries. It’s to do with the fact that while we can describe what happens in just a few phrases – cold gas and dust collapses under its own gravity, until the density is high enough to sustain nuclear fusion – any attempt to add detail produces confusion and a seemingly never-ending list of questions. Wrestling with this classical astronomic­al problem are the authors of this month’s paper, led by Heidelberg University’s Mélanie Chevance.

Part of the problem is that the events that set a protostar’s course take place deep within giant molecular clouds (GMCs), regions of cooling gas which are denser than their surroundin­gs. A nearby example is Orion A, which includes the Orion Nebula and many of the clusters and nebulae south of Orion’s Belt. We know, or at least suspect, that the processes that happen in GMCs are affected by the galactic environmen­t; whether there are other young stars nearby, whether a supernova recently exploded in the vicinity, whether one is in a spiral arm or not. All of these things and more can affect whether the process of star formation gets started, or whether once started any particular collapsing cloud will indeed produce a star.

But we have only really studied such clouds in the Milky Way and in a handful of nearby galaxies.

Clouding the issue

“Part of the problem is that the events that set a protostar’s course take place deep within giant molecular clouds”

As a result, we know little about GMCs. We don’t even know how long they live. Some think that an individual molecular cloud might persist for a hundred million years or so, forming multiple clutches of stars, while other astronomer­s suggest that a cloud exists for a mere (cosmic) blink of an eye, evaporatin­g after no more than 10 million years. By looking at the properties of clouds in nine local star-forming galaxies using ALMA – the interferom­eter in the Atacama desert that’s sensitive to sub-mm, or microwave, radiation – Chevance and colleagues hope to settle this debate. ALMA provides maps of carbon monoxide, a key molecule found in the kind of denser gas seen in GMCs, and the team use observatio­ns of emission from hydrogen to trace where stars are actually forming. The ratio of the two (and a bit of complex maths and thought) gives an indication of how quickly stars are forming in each galaxy. The team’s

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doesn’t dictate how much star formation there is

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though there is some variation, GMCs seem to come and go relatively quickly, lasting only tens of millions of years.

The overall picture is of a complex set of circumstan­ces leading to the formation of any particular star. Even small disruption­s to the environmen­t, for example from the wind of a nearby young star, might be enough to disrupt star formation, or alternativ­ely to destroy a GMC completely. The message is pretty clear. Understand­ing star formation requires getting into the detail and these observatio­ns are only the start.

 ??  ?? Star factory: the Orion A molecular cloud, as captured by the VISTA infrared telescope, contains many young stars
Star factory: the Orion A molecular cloud, as captured by the VISTA infrared telescope, contains many young stars
 ??  ?? Prof Chris Lintott is an astrophysi­cist and co-presenter of The Sky at Night
Prof Chris Lintott is an astrophysi­cist and co-presenter of The Sky at Night

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