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The Birthplace of Stars The space between the stars is not completely empty. Thin clouds of hydrogen and helium, seeded with the “dust” from dying stars, form in interstellar space.
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The Birthplace of Stars The space between the stars is not completely empty. Thin clouds of hydrogen and helium, seeded with the “dust” from dying stars,

Dec 20, 2015

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Page 1: The Birthplace of Stars The space between the stars is not completely empty. Thin clouds of hydrogen and helium, seeded with the “dust” from dying stars,

The Birthplace of StarsThe space between the stars is not completely empty. Thin clouds of hydrogen

and helium, seeded with the “dust” from dying stars, form in interstellar space.

Page 2: The Birthplace of Stars The space between the stars is not completely empty. Thin clouds of hydrogen and helium, seeded with the “dust” from dying stars,

Dark Clouds gather

Page 3: The Birthplace of Stars The space between the stars is not completely empty. Thin clouds of hydrogen and helium, seeded with the “dust” from dying stars,

Molecular CloudsSometimes (especially in spiral arms), the gas is compressed enough that the dust is thick and gravity can collapse knots in these “molecular” clouds to make new stars.

Page 4: The Birthplace of Stars The space between the stars is not completely empty. Thin clouds of hydrogen and helium, seeded with the “dust” from dying stars,

The Initial Collapse

The center of the cloud is densest, so it collapses first. Pressure is removed in an wave moving out at the speed of sound. Material free-falls inside this wave and crashes into a growing (and glowing) central object. We see only the infrared light emerging from the large dust core.

Page 5: The Birthplace of Stars The space between the stars is not completely empty. Thin clouds of hydrogen and helium, seeded with the “dust” from dying stars,

Galactic shear and turbulence give every core a little spin (once round in 10 million years). But they get a lot smaller, and the spin goes up – to orbital!It is for this reason that we believe there are many planetary systems – it is part and parcel of the star formation process to make a disk. Typical Galactic spin makes disks about the size of our Solar System…

A little bit of spin goes a long

way…

Page 6: The Birthplace of Stars The space between the stars is not completely empty. Thin clouds of hydrogen and helium, seeded with the “dust” from dying stars,

The Sword of OrionThe nearest great stellar nursery to us is the great Orion molecular cloud which is about 1000 light years away, and manufacturing thousands of stars. This is probably how the typical

star is made.

Page 7: The Birthplace of Stars The space between the stars is not completely empty. Thin clouds of hydrogen and helium, seeded with the “dust” from dying stars,

The glowing tip of a molecular “cigar”

The Orion nebula is powered by 4 high mass luminous stars, which have cleared out their birthplace and are eating at a long cloud pointed at us.

The Trapezium

Page 8: The Birthplace of Stars The space between the stars is not completely empty. Thin clouds of hydrogen and helium, seeded with the “dust” from dying stars,

Nearby, lower mass stars are forming

Hubble Space Telescope

Page 9: The Birthplace of Stars The space between the stars is not completely empty. Thin clouds of hydrogen and helium, seeded with the “dust” from dying stars,

They look like little windsocks

The blast from the luminous stars is eating away at the little guys

Page 10: The Birthplace of Stars The space between the stars is not completely empty. Thin clouds of hydrogen and helium, seeded with the “dust” from dying stars,

The heart of them contains a potential new solar system

“Proplyds” are new star-disk systems

Page 11: The Birthplace of Stars The space between the stars is not completely empty. Thin clouds of hydrogen and helium, seeded with the “dust” from dying stars,

With powerful bipolar jets

Page 12: The Birthplace of Stars The space between the stars is not completely empty. Thin clouds of hydrogen and helium, seeded with the “dust” from dying stars,

The Star-Disk System Forms while

infall continues

Page 13: The Birthplace of Stars The space between the stars is not completely empty. Thin clouds of hydrogen and helium, seeded with the “dust” from dying stars,

Jets remove excess angular

momentum

Page 14: The Birthplace of Stars The space between the stars is not completely empty. Thin clouds of hydrogen and helium, seeded with the “dust” from dying stars,

In the center - T Tauri Stars

The new young star is exposed, while the accretion disk is still in place. The spectrum of all is seen together (so we don’t have to image disks in order to know they are there).

Page 15: The Birthplace of Stars The space between the stars is not completely empty. Thin clouds of hydrogen and helium, seeded with the “dust” from dying stars,

Half the time, two (or more) stars form

Page 16: The Birthplace of Stars The space between the stars is not completely empty. Thin clouds of hydrogen and helium, seeded with the “dust” from dying stars,

Most stars form in clustersThe typical cluster doesn’t stay bound once the stars form. The remaining 80-90% of the gas dissipates and the stars drift apart.

Page 17: The Birthplace of Stars The space between the stars is not completely empty. Thin clouds of hydrogen and helium, seeded with the “dust” from dying stars,

Star Formation is Beautiful, but ephemeral

Within about 10 million years, the birth-cloud is shredded, and the disks are dissipated. The process of starbirth has ended.

Page 18: The Birthplace of Stars The space between the stars is not completely empty. Thin clouds of hydrogen and helium, seeded with the “dust” from dying stars,

The stage is set for planet

formation