Scientific News Physics Astrophysics HEAVY STARS THRIVE AMONG HEAVY ELEMENTS
HEAVY STARS THRIVE
AMONG HEAVY ELEMENTS
VLT Observes Wolf-Rayet Stars in Virgo Cluster
Galaxies [1]
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Summary
Do very massive stars form in metal-rich
regions of the Universe and in the nuclei of galaxies ?
Or does "heavy element poisoning" stop stellar growth at an
early stage, before young stars reach the "heavyweight class"?
What may at the first glance appear as a
question for specialists actually has profound implications for our
understanding of the evolution of galaxies, those systems of billions of
stars - the main building blocks of the Universe.
With an enormous output of electromagnetic
radiation and energetic elementary particles, massive stars exert a
decisive influence on the surrounding (interstellar) gas and dust clouds.
They also eject large amounts of processed elements, thereby participating
in the gradual build-up of the many elements we see today. Thus the
presence or absence of such stars at the centres of galaxies can
significantly change the overall development of those regions and hence,
presumably, that of the entire galaxy.
A team of European astronomers [2]
has now directly observed the presence of so-called Wolf-Rayet stars
(born with masses of 60 - 90 times that of the Sun or more) within
metal-rich regions in some galaxies in the Virgo cluster, some 50 million
light-years away. This is the first unambiguous detection of such
massive stellar objects in metal-rich regions.
PR
Photo 20a/02: H II regions in the Virgo cluster galaxy NGC
4254.
PR
Photo 20b/02: Multi-object-slit observation of galaxy NGC
4303.
PR
Photo 20c/02: Spectrum of H II region in NGC 4254
with Wolf-Rayet signatures. |
Production of heavy elements in the Universe
Most scientists agree that the Universe in which
we live underwent a dramatic event, known as the Big Bang, approximately
15,000 million years ago. During the early moments, elementary particles were
formed which after some time united into more complex nuclei and in turn
resulted in the production of hydrogen and helium atoms and their isotopes, with
a sprinkling of the light element lithium.
At our epoch, the visible ("baryonic")
matter in the Universe still mostly consists of hydrogen and helium. However,
progressively heavier elements have been built up via fusion processes in the
interior of stars ever since the Big Bang. Some of the heaviest elements are
also produced when massive stars die in gigantic stellar explosions, observed as
"supernovae".
This gradual process, referred to as "chemical
evolution", occurs with different speeds in different regions of the
Universe, being fastest in those regions where star formation is most intense.
In the relatively "quiet" region of the
Milky Way galaxy where our Solar System was born some 4,600 million years ago, it
took nearly 10,000 million years to produce all the heavy elements now found in
our neighbourhood. Contrarily, in the innermost regions (the
"nuclei") of normal galaxies and especially in so-called
"active galaxies", the same or even higher heavy-element
"enrichment" levels were reached in much shorter time, less than about
1,000 to 2,000 million years. This is the result of observations of particularly
active galaxy nuclei ("quasars") in the distant (i.e., early)
Universe.
Star formation in highly enriched environments
Little is presently known about such highly
enriched environments. Since astronomers refer to elements heavier than hydrogen
and helium as "metals", they talk about "metal-rich"
regions. This is readily observable from the presence of strong lines from
heavier elements in the spectra of the interstellar gas in such regions.
A central, still unresolved question is whether
under such special conditions, stars can still form with the same diversity of
masses, as this happens in other, less extreme areas of the Universe.
Indeed, some current theories of star formation and certain indirect
observations appear to indicate that very heavy stars - with masses more than 20
- 30 times that of our Sun - could not possibly form in metal-rich regions.
This would be because the very strong radiation
from nascent stars in such environments would be most efficiently
"stopped" by the surrounding material. That leads to a repulsive
effect, which would rapidly disperse the remains of the natal cloud and thereby
halt any further growth beyond a certain limit. Deprived of "food",
those young stellar objects would be unable to grow beyond a certain, limited
mass.
Stars with masses up to 100 - 200 times that of
the Sun are known to exist in more "normal" regions. However, if the
above ideas were true, there would be no such "heavy-weight" stars in
"metal-rich" regions. Whether this is really so or not has important
implications for a correct understanding of the nuclei of galaxies, the
properties of massive galaxies and, in general, for all evolved regions of the
Universe.
VLT observes star-forming nebulae in distant
galaxies
Using the ESO
Very Large Telescope (VLT) at the Paranal
Observatory, a team of French, Swiss, and Spanish astronomers [2]
were able for the first time to detect signs of a large number of extremely
massive stars inside "metal-rich" star-forming regions. This
observation-based result thus contradicts the above mentioned theory.
The observations aimed at obtaining optical
spectra of numerous such star-forming regions, located in a number of galaxies
in the Virgo galaxy cluster, that is seen in the constellation of that
name at a distance of about 50 million light-years, cf. PR Photo 20a-b/02.
It is at the centre of a supercluster of galaxies in the outskirts of which the
"Local Group" - with the Milky Way galaxy where we live - is located.
These nebulae - also known as "H II
regions" because of their content of ionized hydrogen - are very dim
and therefore difficult to observe. However, the astronomers were able to obtain
detailed spectra of excellent quality, thanks to the large light-collecting
power of the 8.2-m VLT ANTU telescope, together with the FORS1 instrument, here
used in the very efficient multi-spectra mode.
Massive stars in NGC 4254
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ESO PR Photo 20c/02
[Preview
- JPEG: 603 x 400 pix - 68k
[Normal
- JPEG: 1206 x 800 pix - 168k] |
Caption:
PR Photo 20c/02 shows the observational evidence of the presence of
hot and massive "Wolf-Rayet" stars [3]
in a metal-rich H II region (designated "-014+081") in the
spiral galaxy NGC 4254, a member of the Virgo cluster of galaxies at a
distance of about 50 million light-years. Comparison spectra of two types
of Wolf-Rayet stars (WC and WN) in the Milky Way galaxy are shown. The
characteristic spectral features of ionized helium (He II) and double and
triple ionized carbon (C III, C IV) are identical. |
Spectra of about ninety "metal-rich"
HII regions were secured in the course of only one observing night. Almost
thirty of them clearly show unambiguous "spectral fingerprints" of
so-called Wolf-Rayet stars [3],
a type of stars also known in the Milky Way galaxy, cf. PR Photo 20c/02.
They are the descendants of the most massive stars known, and the quality of the
VLT spectra is such that the presence of as few as two Wolf-Rayet stars in one H
II region could be detected, even at this large distance!
A detailed analysis of the comprehensive
observational data has shown that stars with masses of at least 60 - 90 times
that of the Sun are definitely formed in the "metal-rich" regions in
those Virgo galaxies. Furthermore, the ratio of these heavy stars to less
massive ones is found to be identical to that observed in "normal"
environments.
Important implications
These new results provide important information
for our understanding of star formation, one of the central issues of modern
astrophysics. They show beyond doubt that the formation of very massive stars is
not suppressed in an environment with strong chemical enrichment.
Most galactic nuclei, massive and interacting
galaxies and related objects are metal-rich and this new finding therefore
implies that they must also harbour massive stars. The VLT observations provide
the first clear and direct evidence for this.
Massive stars play a leading role in shaping the
complex interactions between the many components of a galaxy - stars,
interstellar gas and cold molecular clouds. With their enormous output of
electromagnetic radiation and strong winds of elementary particles and, not
least, by means of gigantic supernova explosions at the end of their short
lives, they thoroughly stir up the interstellar gas and dust in their
surroundings. Moreover, they are responsible for the production of the bulk of
the heavy elements now observed in the Universe. No picture of the evolution of
galaxies can therefore be complete without taking into account the presence (or
absence) of massive stars.
In more immediate terms, the fact that massive
stars exist in metal-rich environments will also have a direct implication for
the interpretation of spectra of remote galaxies.
Future observations
In the wake of this successful result,
supplementary observations are now being planned with various ESO facilities in
order to obtain a better understanding of the complex phenomenon of massive star
formation in all kinds of galaxies, including those in the nearby Universe and
also primordial galaxies.
This will involve, among others, infrared
observations of young galaxies in which intensive star-forming processes are now
going on ("starburst galaxies") with the Thermal
Infrared Multimode Instrument (TIMMI2) on the ESO
3.6-m telescope at the La
Silla Observatory (Chile), and later with the VLT
Mid Infrared Spectrometer/Imager (VISIR), a future, extremely powerful
mid-infrared sensitive instrument. The infrared technique allows to study the
earliest phases of massive star formation, deep inside the natal clouds. In
addition, highly promising searches for very remote galaxies, in the process of
forming their first stars, are now underway with the Infrared
Spectrometer And Array Camera (ISAAC) at the VLT.
More information
The information presented in this Press Release
is based on a research article in the European research journal "Astronomy
& Astrophysics" ("VLT observations of metal-rich extragalactic HII
regions. I. Massive star populations and the upper end of the IMF" by
Maximilien Pindao, Daniel Schaerer, Rosa M. González Delgado and Grazyna
Stasinska. It is available on the web at http://arXiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0208226.
Notes
[1]: This ESO press release is issued in
coordination between ESO and the Observatoire
Midi-Pyrénées.
[2]: The team consists of Daniel Schaerer
(Principal Investigator; Observatoire Midi-Pyrénées, Toulouse,
France), Maximilien Pindao (Observatoire de Genève, Switzerland), Rosa
M. González Delgado (Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía,
Granada, Spain) and Grazyna Stasinska (Observatoire de Meudon, France).
[3]: Wolf-Rayet stars are named after two
19th-century French astronomers, Charles Wolf and Georges Rayet.
Contact
Daniel Schaerer
Laboratoire d'Astrophysique
CNRS/UMR 5572
Observatoire Midi-Pyrénées
Toulouse, France
Phone: +33 5 61 33 2929/2898
email: schaerer@ast.obs-mip.fr
Source of the given news and the copyrights
belong to a ESO
Very Large Telescope (VLT)
Publishing date: September 4, 2002
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