Stellar Nursery |
With this
new view of a spectacular stellar nursery ESO is celebrating 15 years of the
Very Large Telescope -- the world's most advanced optical instrument. This
picture reveals thick clumps of dust silhouetted against the pink glowing gas
cloud known to astronomers as IC 2944. These opaque blobs resemble drops of ink
floating in a strawberry cocktail, their whimsical shapes sculpted by powerful
radiation coming from the nearby brilliant young stars.
This new
picture celebrates an important anniversary for the Very Large Telescope -- it
is fifteen years since the first light on the first of its four Unit
Telescopes, on 25 May 1998. Since then the four original giant telescopes have
been joined by the four small Auxiliary Telescopes that form part of the VLT
Interferometer (VLTI). The VLT is one of the most powerful and productive
ground-based astronomical facilities in existence. In 2012 more than 600
refereed scientific papers based on data from the VLT and VLTI were published
([ann13009].
Interstellar
clouds of dust and gas are the nurseries where new stars are born and grow. The
new picture shows one of them, IC 2944, which appears as the softly glowing
pink background [1]. This image is the sharpest view of the object ever taken
from the ground [2]. The cloud lies about 6500 light-years away in the southern
constellation of Centaurus (The Centaur). This part of the sky is home to many
other similar nebulae that are scrutinised by astronomers to study the
mechanisms of star formation.
Emission
nebulae like IC 2944 are composed mostly of hydrogen gas that glows in a
distinctive shade of red, due to the intense radiation from the many brilliant
newborn stars. Clearly revealed against this bright backdrop are mysterious
dark clots of opaque dust, cold clouds known as Bok globules. They are named
after the Dutch-American astronomer Bart Bok, who first drew attention to them
in the 1940s as possible sites of star formation. This particular set is
nicknamed the Thackeray Globules [3].
Larger
Bok globules in quieter locations often collapse to form new stars but the ones
in this picture are under fierce bombardment from the ultraviolet radiation
from nearby hot young stars. They are both being eroded away and also
fragmenting, rather like lumps of butter dropped into a hot frying pan. It is
likely that Thackeray's Globules will be destroyed before they can collapse and
form stars.
Bok globules are not easy to study. As they are
opaque to visible light it is difficult for astronomers to observe their inner
workings, and so other tools are needed to unveil their secrets -- observations
in the infrared or in the submillimetre parts of the spectrum, for example,
where the dust clouds, only a few degrees over absolute zero, appear bright.
Such studies of the Thackeray globules have confirmed that there is no current
star formation within them.
No comments:
Post a Comment