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Star Formation in the Interstellar Medium (ISM) Star Formation Ancient History? Or Still Relevant? Are stars still being born in large numbers today? Or has the gas long since been mostly used up? If so, how do we identify regions of star formation? How does it happen? Analogy: a Forest Is it still fertile? To decide that, ignore the old mature trees. Look for saplings and shoots. Identifying Stellar Nurseries Let’s look for extremely young objects! O/B stars -- the hottest stars, on the blue end of the main sequence. (They live only short lives, must be recent arrivals) HII Regions – clouds of ionized hydrogen gas. Why? Because the abundant ultraviolet light from young hot stars is what makes the gas fluoresce. (Note: dying stars can do the same thing, as in Planetary Nebulae and Supernova Remnants. So we must be cautious!) Example: ‘Rosette’ Nebula ..and more Dusty, gassy regions – the raw materials of star formation. Reflection nebulae – newly formed stars may not be hot enough to fully ionize the gas, but can still be bright enough to light up extensive clouds of gas and dust Examples: the Trifid, the Pleiades ..and more Dark Clouds and ‘Globules’ – as the original gas cloud contracts under gravity, its density increases and for a time it can appear as a small dark cloud. Molecular clouds – in the cool confines of dense clouds, complex molecules can form and survive. (In the heat of stars, they would be disrupted.) So if we can detect them (using specialized radio telescopes), we deduce the presence of a big cool cloud of material, ready for gravity to cause its collapse. For example: …and more Infrared sources – as a dense cloud contracts under the influence of gravity, the forming “proto-stars” steadily warm up. They will glow vigorously at infrared wavelengths long before they are hot enough to ignite thermonuclear reactions and become actual stars Orion in Visible Light and in Infrared Light …and yet more! Stars not yet on the main sequence – find a cluster in which the massive stars are already on the main sequence, but the low-mass stars are not yet there. This is because their gravity is weaker, and they collapse somewhat more slowly as they form! T Tauri stars – young stars, including some called T Tauri stars, typically have strongly enhanced `solar winds’. (This provided the ‘Magic Broom’ that swept out unused gas when the solar system formed.) Example: NGC 2264 …and finally ‘Unbound’ systems – we sometimes find small groups (like quartets) of stars which are dynamically unstable. (Like an impossibly incompatible couple, they will inevitably separate and drift apart! The fact that they have not yet done so is evidence that the system is young.) One Example: the Trapezium ..in the heart of the Orion Nebula Indeed, Orion is An Ideal Location for Studying Star Formation! Note that the nebula is about ½ a degree across – looking as big as the full moon! It can be seen as a fuzzy patch with the unaided eye. It is Relatively Nearby, Conspicuous - and Easily Studied Exactly How Do Stars Form? Various Things to Consider Imagine an extended cloud of gas in space. 1. 2. 3. What determines whether it collapses or not under the influence of its own gravity? Will it collapse to form a single big star, or break up into smaller lumps? How long does the process take? What will we see as this goes on? ‘Cloudy’ Interstellar Space The Interstellar Medium (ISM) consists of: a lot of low-density distributed material (mainly hydrogen and helium); plus here and there, denser accumulations (‘clouds’) made of the same material Not Like Earth’s Clouds! In our atmosphere, the visible material in the clouds is water droplets; but the surrounding atmosphere is mainly N2 and O2 Interstellar Space is Very Nearly a Vacuum The densities are far lower than we can achieve on Earth. We simply cannot reproduce and test the physical conditions in our labs. A Delicate Balance In a cloud, gravity pulls the atoms together. But their random motions (the‘heat’of the cloud) provides a sustaining pressure. (The same effect sustains the depth of the Earth’s atmosphere: because the air is warm, the molecules don’t all ‘fall to the ground.’) Still, if the cloud is massive enough (lots of selfgravity!) or if it is cool enough (reduced sustaining pressure), an inward collapse can start. This is Easier for Big Clouds The density of interstellar gas, even in the clouds, is so low that only a really huge cloud will collapse to from stars (unless the material can be made to cool off dramatically). Example: some Giant Molecular Clouds (GMCs) contain enough material to make 100,000 stars or more! In general, then, we expect stars to form in large complexes, not as individuals here and there. For Example: In Orion (~1500 light years from us) The ‘Kleinmann-Low’ Nebula is a strong infrared source: cool gas and dust. Will a Large Cloud Form a Single Superstar? Could an isolated large cloud collapse to form a single star 100,000 times as massive as the Sun? If not, why not? (The biggest stars we see are only ~100 times the sun’s mass.) Such ‘Superstars’ Can’t Exist! There is a limit to how massive any star can be! Very massive stars have to be fantastically hot (to hold themselves up against gravity). This means that they will be abundantly filled with energetic radiation (light), which in turn provides a pressure that will actually disrupt the star. The so-called Eddington limit is about 150 times the mass of the Sun. No stars more massive than that can exist! Instead: Fragmentation Clusters As they contract under gravity, the hugely massive clouds fragment into smaller pieces, forming star-sized lumps! (The physics of this is well understood.) As a result, stars form in big clusters (which may, however, later dissipate). Globular star clusters, for example, must have formed in this way. What Then? As an individual “proto-star’ lump contracts, it slowly heats up. It glows first in the infrared, and only later in visible light (as it gets progressively hotter). On the other hand, such a proto-star is quite big to begin with. So it can emit quite a lot of red and infrared light! But it will gradually shrink in size and eventually settle down as a main-sequence star (when it’s hot enough to start nuclear reactions in the core) Stars Above the Main Sequence - but moving towards it! Note that the lower-mass stars take longer to reach the main sequence. (Their gravity is weaker; they contract more slowly.) Hence, As We Saw Earlier: NGC 2264: a young cluster in formation. The Full Cycle Gas forms stars which eventually recycle material (the massive stars explode as supernovae; the lower-mass stars‘puff off’ a planetary nebula much more quietly) later, the recycled gas forms yet more new stars… Two very important points: (a) later generations of stars will contain a higher fraction of heavier elements (there is progressive enrichment); and (b) this cannot last forever! More and more material gets locked up in remnants (slowly cooling white dwarfs, neutron stars, black holes,…)