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Infrared space telescope reveals "greedy stellar babies"

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pmbryant Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-19-05 05:34 PM
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Infrared space telescope reveals "greedy stellar babies"
From Sky and Telescope magazine:

Spitzer Reveals Greedy Stellar Babies in Trifid
By David Shiga

January 13, 2005 | Stars in the process of forming compete with one another for resources as they grow. That's just one of the results that has emerged from new Spitzer Space Telescope infrared images that penetrate dust in the Trifid Nebula (M20), which lies 5,400 light-years away in the constellation Sagittarius.

Spitzer uncovered 120 young stars and 30 even younger protostars behind the dust. Ten of the protostars reside in four dense knots of dust, where astronomers had previously thought conditions weren't right for star formation. "Finally, with Spitzer infrared images, we can see what's going on in here," says team leader Jeonghee Rho (Caltech).

Two of the knots are giving birth to many stars at once. This defies conventional theory, which predicts that every star forms from a separate clump of material. In each knot, the most massive and rapidly growing protostar is located at the center, which is exactly what one would expect in a scenario where protostars have been competing for material. In this "competitive accretion" model, stars that form in a single knot move around through gravitational interactions as they grow, with the most massive star settling to the center. Since that is where the most material resides, the massive star's growth accelerates even further at the expense of its smaller siblings. "The monster in the basement eats everything," says Mordecai-Mark MacLow (American Museum of Natural History, New York). Astronomers can use Spitzer to track the growth rate of the protostars because the infalling material heats up and gives off infrared radiation.

(snip)


More: http://skyandtelescope.com/news/article_1439_1.asp
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