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APEX reveals glowing stellar nurseries

November 12th, 2008 - 1:01 pm ICT by ANI -

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Munich, Nov 12 (ANI): The Atacama Pathfinder Experiment (APEX) telescope has revealed how an expanding bubble of ionised gas about ten light-years across is causing the surrounding material to collapse into dense clumps that are the birthplaces of new stars.

The region, called RCW120, is about 4200 light years from Earth, towards the constellation of Scorpius.

A hot, massive star in its centre is emitting huge amounts of ultraviolet radiation, which ionises the surrounding gas, stripping the electrons from hydrogen atoms and producing the characteristic red glow of so-called H-alpha emission.

As this ionised region expands into space, the associated shock wave sweeps up a layer of the surrounding cold interstellar gas and cosmic dust.

This layer becomes unstable and collapses under its own gravity into dense clumps, forming cold, dense clouds of hydrogen where new stars are born.

However, as the clouds are still very cold, with temperatures of around 250 degree Celsius, their faint heat glow can only be seen at submillimetre wavelengths.

Submillimetre light is therefore vital in studying the earliest stages of the birth and life of stars.

The submillimetre-wavelength data were taken with the LABOCA camera on the 12-m APEX telescope, located on the 5000 m high plateau of Chajnantor in the Chilean Atacama desert.

Thanks to LABOCAs high sensitivity, astronomers were able to detect clumps of cold gas four times fainter than previously possible.

Since the brightness of the clumps is a measure of their mass, this also means that astronomers can now study the formation of less massive stars than they could before. (ANI)




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