Hubble
Peeks into a Stellar Nursery in a Nearby Galaxy
NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has peered deep into
a neighboring galaxy to reveal details of the formation of new stars.
Hubble's target was a newborn star cluster within the Small Magellanic
Cloud, a small galaxy that is a satellite of our own Milky Way.
The new images show young, brilliant stars cradled within a nebula,
or glowing cloud of gas, cataloged as N 81.
These massive, recently formed stars inside N 81 are
losing material at a high rate, sending out strong stellar winds
and shock waves and hollowing out a cocoon within the surrounding
nebula. The two most luminous stars, seen in the Hubble image as
a very close pair near the center of N 81, emit copious ultraviolet
radiation, causing the nebula to glow through fluorescence.
Outside the hot, glowing gas is cooler material consisting
of hydrogen molecules and dust. Normally this material is invisible,
but some of it can be seen in silhouette against the nebular background,
as long dust lanes and a small, dark, elliptical-shaped knot. It
is believed that the young stars have formed from this cold matter
through gravitational contraction.
Few features can be seen in N 81 from ground-based
telescopes, earning it the informal nick-name "The Blob." Astronomers
were not sure if just one or a few hot stars were embedded in the
cloud, or if it was a stellar nursery containing a large number
of less massive stars. Hubble's high-resolution imaging shows the
latter to be the case, revealing that numerous young, white-hot
stars---easily visible in the color picture---are contained within
N 81.
This crucial information bears strongly on theories
of star formation, and N 81 offers a singular opportunity for a
close-up look at the turbulent conditions accompanying the birth
of massive stars. The brightest stars in the cluster have a luminosity
equal to 300,000 stars like our own Sun. Astronomers are especially
keen to study star formation in the Small Magellanic Cloud, because
its chemical composition is different from that of the Milky Way.
All of the chemical elements, other than hydrogen and helium, have
only about one-tenth the abundances seen in our own galaxy.
The study of N81 thus provides an excellent template
for studying the star formation that occurred long ago in very distant
galaxies, before nuclear reactions inside stars had synthesized
the elements heavier than helium.
The Small Magellanic Cloud, named after the explorer
Ferdinand Magellan, lies 200,000 light-years away, and is visible
only from the Earth's southern hemisphere. N 81 is the 81st nebula
cataloged in a survey of the SMC carried out in the 1950's by astronomer
Karl Henize, who later became an astronomer-astronaut who flew into
space aboard NASA's space shuttle.
The Hubble Heritage image of N 81 is a color representation
of data taken in September, 1997, with Hubble's Wide Field Planetary
Camera 2. Color filters were used to sample light emitted by oxygen
([O III]) and hydrogen (H-alpha, H-beta).
N 81 is the target of investigations by European
astronomers Mohammad Heydari-Malayeri from the Paris Observatory
in France; Michael Rosa from the Space Telescope-European Coordinating
Facility in Munich, Germany; Hans Zinnecker of the Astrophysical
Institute in Potsdam, Germany; Lise Deharveng of Marseille Observatory,
France; and Vassilis Charmadaris of Cornell University, USA (formerly
at Paris Observatory). Members of this team are interested in understanding
the formation of hot, massive stars, especially under conditions
different from those in the Milky Way.
Image Credit:
NASA and The Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA)
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