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Star Formation Jumps From Place To Place In Galaxy

Star formation may jump from place to place inside a galaxy like a brushfire front, according to a team of astronomers from the UK, Australia and Spain.

The team used the Hubble Space Telescope and other telescopes to study a galaxy called NGC 2903, which lies 25 million light-years away and is similar to our own galaxy.

The HST picture shows that known "hot spots" near the center of the galaxy are clusters of stars born 5 to 10 million years ago. Other spots in the galaxy are clouds of ionized hydrogen gas where young stars are forming today.

The two kinds of spots are far apart, meaning that star-forming activity is shifting from place to place.

"It's moving surprisingly fast, about a million kilometers a year on average," says team member Dr. Stuart Ryder of the Anglo-Australian Observatory in Sydney.

Stars form when a giant cloud of cold hydrogen gas collapses in on itself.

"Star formation may be like a brushfire," says Dr. Ryder. "Once it has burnt out an area, it has to move on to where there's more fuel or it will die out." He adds, "Perhaps when one cloud of gas is used up by being turned into stars, the star-forming process starts in a neighboring cloud, possibly triggered by shock waves from stars exploding nearby."

The astronomers also found that a dense region of stars in the galaxy, called a bar, seems to funnel gas into the galaxy's center, fueling the birth of young stars.

"The center of this galaxy is like a retirement village," Dr. Ryder says. "Most of the stars are old. But we see a bit more action in places -- a couple of discos starting up. That means there are some younger inhabitants as well."

The research team members are Almudena Alonso-Herrero (University of Hertfordshire, UK), Stuart D. Ryder (Anglo-Australian Observatory, Sydney, Australia) and Johan H. Knapen (Isaac Newton Group of Telescopes, Spain, and the University of Hertfordshire, UK).

Research details are to be published in a forthcoming issue of Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. Text of the paper is available at this URL.

Related website:.

Bar In Spiral Galaxy

[Contact: Dr. Stuart Ryder, Dr. Almudena Alonso-Herrero ]

05-Mar-2001

 

 

 

 

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