Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,537,061 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Rethinking an astronomical icon: the Eagle's EGGs: not so fertile.


In 1995, less than 2 years after astronauts installed a device to correct the Hubble Space Telescope's blurry vision, NASA NASA: see National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
NASA
 in full National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Independent U.S.
 released a picture that captivated cap·ti·vate  
tr.v. cap·ti·vat·ed, cap·ti·vat·ing, cap·ti·vates
1. To attract and hold by charm, beauty, or excellence. See Synonyms at charm.

2. Archaic To capture.
 millions. In it, eerie blue-green pillars of gas and dust rise up like stalagmites in a cave. In a glimpse of the universe that's both science and art, a team of Arizona astronomers captured what they thought were nests brimming with stellar embryos. "I distinctly recall the first time I saw the image, in my office on a quiet holiday, a few days before the press release came out," says astronomer Mark J. McCaughrean of the Astrophysical as·tro·phys·ics  
n. (used with a sing. verb)
The branch of astronomy that deals with the physics of stellar phenomena.



as
 Institute in Potsdam, Germany. "I was blown away ... and immediately went in search of someone to show it to."

The picture landed on the covers of magazines around the world (SN: 11/4/95, p. 294). Jay Leno Jay Leno (born April 28, 1950) is an Emmy-winning American comedian, writer who is best known as the current host of NBC television's long-running variety and talk program The Tonight Show. Biography
Leno was born in New Rochelle, New York.
 displayed it on the Tonight Show. The heavenly portrait not only restored Hubble's tarnished reputation but became an astronomical icon.

Now, images taken with infrared detectors show that icon in a new light.

Composed of cold hydrogen gas and dust, the pillars reside in the Milky Way's Eagle nebula The Eagle Nebula (also known as Messier Object 16, M16 or NGC 6611), perhaps one of the most famous and easily recognized space objects, is a young open cluster of stars in the constellation Serpens, discovered by Jean-Philippe de Cheseaux in 1745-46. , a star-forming region 7,000 light-years from Earth. The columns are the dense remnants of what had been a giant gas cloud. Harsh ultraviolet light Ultraviolet light
A portion of the light spectrum not visible to the eye. Two bands of the UV spectrum, UVA and UVB, are used to treat psoriasis and other skin diseases.
 and fierce winds from a nearby cluster of hot, massive stars blasted away most of that cloud, leaving the pillars behind. As the ultraviolet light continues to bombard bom·bard  
tr.v. bom·bard·ed, bom·bard·ing, bom·bards
1. To attack with bombs, shells, or missiles.

2. To assail persistently, as with requests. See Synonyms at attack, barrage2.

3.
 the pillars, it both hinders and fosters star birth. It hinders it by continuing to erode material and fosters it by compressing gas, hastening its collapse into stars.

When their original visible-light image was released, Hubble astronomers Paul Scowen and J. Jeff Hester of Arizona State University Arizona State University, at Tempe; coeducational; opened 1886 as a normal school, became 1925 Tempe State Teachers College, renamed 1945 Arizona State College at Tempe. Its present name was adopted in 1958.  in Tempe drew special attention to a group of dense, comet-shaped protrusions at or near the tips of the pillars. They suggested that the protrusions, which they called "evaporating gas globules," or EGGs, are havens where stars are forming.

Taking the findings one step further, Hester and his colleagues proposed that the EGGs represent a novel aspect of star formation. The unrelenting ultraviolet radiation from the neighborhood bullies wasn't only laying bare the EGGs, it was stripping material from these would-be stellar nurseries, stopping newborn stars from packing on additional girth GIRTH., A girth or yard is a measure of length. The word is of Saxon origin, taken from the circumference of the human body. Girth is contracted from girdeth, and signifies as much as girdle. See Ell.  (SN: 11/30/96, p. 350). According to Hester's team, the erosion of material by bombardment of ultraviolet radiation, a process dubbed photoevaporation, may be the primary factor in limiting the heft of newborn stars across the galaxy.

Hester had estimated that hundreds to thousands of stars are currently forming in the 73 EGGs recorded by the Hubble camera. That interpretation prompted NASA to issue a press release that called the dusty columns "pillars of creation Pillars of Creation can refer to:
  • The Pillars of Creation, a fantasy novel by Terry Goodkind
  • Columns of interstellar gas and dust in the Eagle Nebula
."

But there remained one problem with this interpretation, notes McCaughrean. The images were taken in visible light, and visible light doesn't penetrate dust. More recently, several researchers, including Hester and McCaughrean, have independently examined the EGGs with infrared detectors, which can probe the interior of the dusty columns.

The resulting images paint a different portrait of the pillars of creation. Only 15 percent of the EGGs contain newborn stars; the rest are sterile, too sparse in dust and gas to support star formation. Nonetheless, researchers disagree about whether ultraviolet light limits the growth of these infants.

EYES OF THE BEHOLDER "The [visible-light] image was and is one of the most stunning things to come out of the Hubble Space Telescope Hubble Space Telescope (HST), the first large optical orbiting observatory. Built from 1978 to 1990 at a cost of $1.5 billion, the HST (named for astronomer E. P. Hubble) was expected to provide the clearest view yet obtained of the universe. ," says MeCaughrean. "On the other hand, much of the EGG-star formation theory was rather speculative, and after it got sound-bitten a few times, the public ended up thinking this revolutionized everything we ever knew about how stars are made."

To examine the pillars, McCaughrean and Morten Andersen, a colleague at Potsdam, recently used one of the quartet of 8-meter telescopes collectively known as the Very Large Telescope The Very Large Telescope Project (VLT) is a system of four separate optical telescopes (the Antu telescope, the Kueyen telescope, the Melipal telescope, and the Yepun telescope) organized in an array formation. Each telescope has an 8.2 m aperture.  (VLT VLT Valletta (postal locality, Malta)
VLT Very Large Telescope
VLT Video Lottery Terminal
VLT Vermont Land Trust
VLT Visible Light Transmittance
VLT Variable List Table
VLT Very Long-Term
) in Paranal, Chile. Their findings will be published in an upcoming Astronomy and Astrophysics Astronomy and astrophysics may refer to:
  • the physical science fields of study of astronomy and astrophysics
  • Astronomy and Astrophysics, a peer reviewed scientific journal

Astronomy and Astrophysics (abbreviated as A&A
. A group of Japanese researchers also studied the pillars in the infrared, using the University of Hawaii's 2.2-m telescope. They report their findings in the Jan. 20 Astrophysical Journal Letters.

Hester maintains, however, that the new findings only confirm his original view, that ultraviolet light has been limiting the final mass of stars forming in the Eagle nebula's EGGs. He and his collaborators had studied the pillars with Hubble's near-infrared camera and multi-object spectrometer (NICMOS NICMOS: see infrared astronomy. ) in 1998, about a year before the device ran out of its solid nitrogen coolant coolant (kōō´lnt),
n
 and stopped operating. They found that few of the EGGS contain stars.

NASA unveiled this infrared image at a press briefing last month, where officials described plans for an ambitious mission to tune up Hubble. In that mission, astronauts attached a refrigerator to NICMOS to revive it (see p. 163). A report by Hester and his colleagues Rodger I. Thompson of the University of Arizona (body, education) University of Arizona - The University was founded in 1885 as a Land Grant institution with a three-fold mission of teaching, research and public service.  in Tucson and Bradford A. Smith of the University of Hawaii (body, education) University of Hawaii - A University spread over 10 campuses on 4 islands throughout the state.

http://hawaii.edu/uhinfo.html.

See also Aloha, Aloha Net.
 in Honolulu is scheduled for publication in the Astrophysical Journal.

"I'll admit that my original guess was that a larger fraction of the EGGs would contain young stellar objects," Hester says. The infrared images taken by the three teams imply that within the pillars an amount of gas equivalent to one-thousandth the sun's mass is converted into stars each year. Although that rate is one-tenth the amount he had calculated in 1995, Hester says it's "still a remarkably high star-formation rate."

The pillars, estimated to contain only a few hundred solar masses of material, could only sustain that rate of star formation for 100,000 years, he notes.

"We are seeing a brief, fairly intense period of star formation, with an ongoing competition between material being tied up in stars and material being dispersed by photoevaporation," says Hester. "The bottom line is that the [new] star-formation rate for the columns is both significant and the right magnitude to support the idea that photoevaporation plays a key role in shaping what is going on."

SAME IMAGES, NEW IDEAS McCaughrean says the new infrared images, which show that only about 11 EGGs contain stars, make it even more of a stretch to suggest that nearby massive stars and the ultraviolet radiation they emit limit the maximum mass of stars in the Eagle's pillars, let alone the rest of the Milky Way galaxy Milky Way Galaxy

Large spiral galaxy (roughly 150,000 light-years in diameter) that contains Earth's solar system. It includes the multitude of stars whose light is seen as the Milky Way, the irregular luminous band that encircles the sky defining the plane of the galactic
.

Moreover, he notes, many models of star formation indicate that massive stars take longer to assemble than do lower-mass stars, such as the typical stars within the EGGs. If that's the case, then EGG stars would reach maturity before neighboring stars could have grown massive enough to emit the disruptive utraviolet radiation. The ultraviolet light would therefore have little affect on the overall mass of the newborn, he contends.

In this scenario, the radiation might still disperse the disks of gas and dust that surround newborn stars, interfering with their ability to form planets from this material, McCaughrean notes.

Hester interprets the same data differently. "The process that is revealed by the infrared and other observations is frankly remarkably close to the process that we originally suggested," he says.

Mario Livio of the Space Telescope Science Institute The Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) is the science operations center for the Hubble Space Telescope (HST; in orbit since 1990) and for the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST; scheduled to be launched in 2013).  in Baltimore agrees that the early interpretations of the image were plausible. "I don't think the [original] image was hyped too much," he says. And although he notes that the picture's influence "was always because of its breathtaking beauty, not necessarily because of its scientific impact," the image did inspire astronomers to search for similar structures in other star-forming regions of the Milky Way.

"We now know that in many star-forming regions, such as 30 Doradus, you find such pillars," Livio adds.

The best observations to date indicate that there's little if any variation in the typical mass of newborn stars, whether they form in low-density regions of the Milky Way, which contain no massive stars, or regions bombarded by ultraviolet radiation from heavyweights, notes Stephen E. Strom of the National Optical Astronomy Observatory The United States National Optical Astronomy Observatory (NOAO) consists of three observatories under one management structure:
  • Kitt Peak National Observatory
  • Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory
  • National Solar Observatory
 in Tucson. "The issue of triggering star formation, in which ultraviolet radiation could play a role, should be isolated from the ability of the radiation to determine the mass of stars--there's no evidence of that," he says.

"This whole theory of truncated star formation was always just hype," says astronomer Lynne Hillenbrand of the California Institute of Technology California Institute of Technology, at Pasadena, Calif.; originally for men, became coeducational in 1970; founded 1891 as Throop Polytechnic Institute; called Throop College of Technology, 1913–20.  in Pasadena. Ultraviolet radiation from massive stars "surely is impacting the pillars, but once a star has started to form, I doubt the radiation dominates over gravity anywhere but in the outermost out·er·most  
adj.
Most distant from the center or inside; outmost.


outermost
Adjective

furthest from the centre or middle

Adj. 1.
 [layers] of the star-forming core," she notes.

When the original pillar images came out in 1995, Hubble's flawed optics had only recently been corrected. To both the scientific community and the public, the orbiting telescope was no longer a symbol of high-tech failure, says Hester. He adds, "The image became attached to the larger story--the recovery of Hubble and the dreams that had originally accompanied its launch."

Scientists don't find it surprising that interpretations of an astronomical image--even an icon like the pillars--may need revising, says McCaughrean. Hester "was doing science when he made a hypothesis based on his observations, and we're also doing science in checking his hypothesis and finding it to be less substantial than he hoped," McCaughrean notes. "The problem with press releases is that they tend to obscure this to-and-fro process, making science sound like it's all unimpeachable un·im·peach·a·ble  
adj.
1. Difficult or impossible to impeach: an unimpeachable witness.

2. Beyond reproach; blameless: unimpeachable behavior.

3.
 Eureka moments."

The new findings also highlight how much astronomers still have to learn about star formation. The arguments may not be settled until researchers can take ultrasharp, longer-wavelength images of the region. Infrared images and spectra obtained at these longer wavelengths can penetrate more of the dust in the pillars and provide a better estimate of the number and masses of stars that reside there, says McCaughrean.

He emphasizes that Hubble has an unavoidable case of tunnel vision--a small field of view. Just around the corner from the pillars, a much larger drama is unfolding. "There's a huge cluster of young stars, several thousand of them, which are home to the [handful of] massive stars whose ultraviolet light is destroying the pillars," McCaughrean notes. There's no clear evidence that the ultraviolet radiation from these massive stars determine the size of the thousands of Iow-mass stars in the cluster, he asserts.

In their Astronomy and Astrophysics report, McCaughrean and his colleagues summarize the findings this way: "The ongoing destruction of the columns and the relatively limited star formation taking place within them may ultimately prove to be a sideshow See Windows SideShow.  in the grander scheme of things--albeit a beautiful one."
COPYRIGHT 2002 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:nebula's evaporating gas globules
Author:Cowen, Ron
Publication:Science News
Date:Mar 16, 2002
Words:1756
Previous Article:Are they really extinct? Searches for plants and animals so rare that they may not be there at all.
Next Article:Eight hours of sleep may not be so great. (Biomedicine).(study shows 7 hours may be better)(Brief Article)
Topics:



Related Articles
Object 50: a stellar quick-change artist.
How to form large planets.
Glimpses of alien comets and planets? (nebulas found around 3 stars)
The Orion Nebula's bright new image.
A distorted view of the Southern Crab. (nebula visible in a Southern Hemisphere constellation)
Free-floaters: Images of planets?(dispute over what qualifies as planet)(Brief Article)
Survey Probes Cosmos from Near to Far.(Sloan Digital Sky Survey)(Brief Article)
Journey through the universe: a gallery of observations.(new astronomy exhibit at the Smithsonian Institution National Air and Space Museum)
Extrasolar orb is too close for comfort. (Planet's Slim-Fast Plan).
Gorgeous gas: new observations of space clouds reveal stellar histories. .(Cover Story)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles