The Herschel Space Observatory has uncovered a weird ring of dusty material
while obtaining one of the sharpest scans to date of a huge cloud of gas and
dust, called NGC 7538. The observations have revealed numerous clumps of
material, a baker's dozen of which may evolve into the most powerful kinds of
stars in the universe. Herschel is a European Space Agency mission with
important NASA contributions.
"We have looked at NGC 7538 with Herschel and identified 13 massive, dense
clumps where colossal stars could form in the future," said paper lead author
Cassandra Fallscheer, a visiting assistant professor of astronomy at Whitman
College in Walla Walla, Washington, and lead author of the paper published in
The Astrophysical Journal. "In addition, we have found a gigantic ring structure
and the weird thing is, we're not at all sure what created it."
NGC 7538 is relatively nearby, at a distance of about 8,800 light-years and
located in the constellation Cepheus. The cloud, which has a mass on the order
of 400,000 suns, is undergoing an intense bout of star formation. Astronomers
study stellar nurseries such as NGC 7538 to better learn how stars come into
being. Finding the mysterious ring, in this case, came as an unexpected bonus.
The cool, dusty ring has an oval shape, with its long axis spanning about 35
light-years and its short axis about 25 light-years. Fallscheer and her
colleagues estimate that the ring possesses the mass of 500 suns. Additional
data from the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope, located at the Mauna Kea
Observatory in Hawaii, further helped characterize the odd ovoid. Astronomers
often see ring and bubble-like structures in cosmic dust clouds. The strong
winds cast out by the most massive stars, called O-type stars, can generate
these expanding puffs, as can their explosive deaths as supernovas. But no
energetic source or remnant of a deceased O-type star, such as a neutron star,
is apparent within the center of this ring. It is possible that a big star blew
the bubble and, because stars are all in motion, subsequently left the scene,
escaping detection.
The observations were taken as part of the Herschel OB Young Stellar objects
(HOBYS) Key Programme. The "OB" refers to the two most massive kinds of stars,
O-type and B-type. These bright blue, superhot, short-lived stars end up
exploding as supernovas, leaving behind either incredibly dense neutron stars or
even denser black holes.
Stars of this caliber form from gassy, dusty clumps with initial masses
dozens of times greater than the sun's; the 13 clumps spotted in NGC 7358, some
of which lie along the edge of the mystery ring, all are more than 40 times more
massive than the sun. The clumps gravitationally collapse in on themselves,
growing denser and hotter in their cores until nuclear fusion ignites and a star
is born. For now, early in the star-formation process, the clumps remain quite
cold, just a few tens of degrees above absolute zero. At these temperatures, the
clumps emit the bulk of their radiation in the low-energy, submillimeter and
infrared light that Herschel was specifically designed to detect.
As astronomers continue probing these budding O-type giants in NGC 7358, the
follow-up observations with other telescopes should also help in solving the
puzzle of the humongous, dusty ring. "Further research to determine the
mechanism responsible for creating the ring structure is necessary," said
Fallscheer.
Herschel is a European Space Agency mission, with science instruments
provided by consortia of European institutes and with important participation by
NASA. While the observatory stopped making science observations in April 2013,
after running out of liquid coolant as expected, scientists continue to analyze
its data. NASA's Herschel Project Office is based at the Jet Propulsion
Laboratory in Pasadena, California.
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