Science and Exploration

Dark Clouds, Young Stars, and a Dash of Hollywood

By Keith Cowing
October 30, 2012
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Dark Clouds, Young Stars, and a Dash of Hollywood
Barnard 68
MPIA

Stars are born in hiding, when dense regions within clouds of gas and dust collapse under their own gravity. But the clouds not only provide the raw material for star formation, they also absorb most of the light from their interior, hiding from view the crucial details of stellar birth — one of the key astronomical processes if we want to understand our own origins!
Now, two groups in the EPoS (“Earliest Phases of Star formation”) project led by MPIA’s Oliver Krause, using ESA’s Herschel Space Telescope, report new results in understanding the earliest stages of star formation.

On the trail of the origin of low-mass stars (with less than about twice the mass of our Sun), a team led by Markus Nielbock (MPIA) has completed a detailed investigation of one of the best-known potential stellar birthplaces: the dark cloud (or “globule”) Barnard 68 in the constellation Ophiuchus. Combining the Herschel Space Telescope’s unrivaled sharpness and sensitivity in the far-infrared range with a method more often encountered in visual effects companies working on Hollywood blockbusters than in astronomy, the researchers were able to construct the most realistic 3D model of the cloud to date.

The method, adapted for this particular use by MPIA’s Ralf Launhardt, uses what is known as ray tracing: For each minute portion of the object that we can see, the line of sight is traced back into the object itself. The contribution by each portion of the light’s path — is light being absorbed at this particular point? is it being emitted? if yes, at which wavelengths? — are added up. Ray tracing is routinely used to produce realistic-looking computer-generated creatures, objects or whole scenes. Here, it helped to match light emitted within Barnard 68 at different wavelengths with simplified models of the cloud’s three-dimensional shape, density and temperature distribution.

The results have shaken up some of what astronomers thought they knew about this cloud. The emerging picture is one of Barnard 68 condensing from a drawn-out filament, heated by unevenly distributed external radiation from the direction of the central plane of our home galaxy. The astronomers also found some signs pointing to a cloud fragment in collision with Barnard 68, which might lead to the cloud’s collapse, and the formation of one or more low-mass stars, within the next hundreds of thousands of years, and whose existence had been predicted by a previous study (Burkert & Alves 2009).

As cosmic clouds go, Barnard 68 is rather small. Clouds of this size will give birth to a few low-mass stars at most. To find out how massive stars are born (mass greater than about twice the mass of the Sun), a team led by MPIA’s Sarah Ragan turned Herschel’s PACS camera to 45 significantly more massive dark clouds. The clouds contain numerous stars about to be born, so-called “protostars”. While previous missions, such as NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope, have also searched for protostars, Herschel enables astronomers to probe deeper into the clouds than ever before. Younger protostars are hidden much more effectively within their clouds than older ones. Herschel managed to find the youngest and most primitive protostars known.

The new observations swelled the ranks of known protostars from 330 to nearly 500 and, most excitingly, led to the discovery of a new type of not-quite-a-star: dense regions at a mere 15 degrees above absolute zero (-258 degrees Celsius) with no sign of a protostar. These regions are likely to be in an early precursor stage of star formation. In astronomy, where timescales of hundreds of millions or of billions of years are the norm, the fact that this precursor stage is expected to last less than 1,000 years makes it extremely short-lived. Studying these elusive, pristine objects lays a necessary foundation for all subsequent studies of star formation.

PIO Contact:

Markus Poessel
Max Planck Institute for Astronomy
+49 (0) 6221 528 261
pr@mpia.de

Science Contacts:

Markus Nielbock
Max Planck Institute for Astronomy
+49 (0) 6221 528 445
nielbock@mpia.de

Sarah Ragan
Max Planck Institute for Astronomy
+49 (0) 6221 528 458
ragan@mpia.de

References:
“The Earliest Phases of Star formation (EPoS) observed with Herschel: the dust temperature and density distributions of B68” by M. Nielbock et al., A&A, Vol. 547, Nov. 2012, A11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201219139

“The Earliest Phases of Star Formation (EPoS): a Herschel key program: The precursors to high-mass stars and clusters” by S. Ragan et al., A&A, Vol. 547, Nov. 2012, A49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201219232

Text, images, and more information:
http://www.mpia.de/Public/menu_q2e.php?Aktuelles/PR/2012/PR121030/PR_121030_en.html

SpaceRef co-founder, Explorers Club Fellow, ex-NASA, Away Teams, Journalist, Space & Astrobiology, Lapsed climber.