ESO Press Photo 24a/00 PR Photo 24a/00 is a near-infrared, colour-coded |
Beautiful images of astronomical objects often contain a lot of
scientifically interesting information – PR Photo 24a/00, shown
above, is a fine example of this old maxime.
It provides a deep and unsually wide look into a giant star forming
region in the Milky Way. It is known as Messier 17
(M 17), or the Omega, Swan, Horseshoe, or Lobster
Nebula, because of its characteristic shape when photographed in
visible light. It is located at a distance of approx. 5000 light-years
(1.6 kpc), and is seen in the southern constellation of Sagittarius
(The Archer), near the main plane of the Milky Way.
This impressive image was obtained by astronomers Leonardo
Testi (Arcetri Astrophysical Observatory, Florence, Italy;
p.t. Visiting Scientist at ESO-Chile) and Leonardo Vanzi
(ESO-Chile) with the SOFI
multi-mode instrument at the ESO 3.6-m
New Technology Telescope (NTT) at the La Silla observatory. The
observations were made in the course of a research project that is
aimed at the detection and study of the formation of massive stars, by
means of near-infrared direct and spectral exposures with this
instrument.
The new data offer a unique combination of a wide field-of-view,
high sensitivity and excellent image quality. The goal of these
particular observations was to identify massive stars that are in the
act of formation in this area and to record their infrared spectra for
a detailed physical study of these rather rare objects.
The formation of massive stars
It is now well established that the formation of stars in our
galaxy, the Milky Way system, predominantly takes place in Giant
Molecular Clouds. However, while low-mass stars are common and
relatively easy to find in such clouds, it is much more difficult to
find massive stars while they are in the very early stage of their
evolution.
This is because massive stars are comparatively rare and pass
through the different evolutionary phases much faster than low-mass
and solar-like stars. They are usually found within dense stellar
clusters, located at large distances from the Sun.
The earliest evolutionary stages of both low- and high-mass stars
cannot be observed at visible wavelengths. This is due to the very
heavy obscuration in that wavelength region by the dust in the
parental molecular clouds. However, infrared and millimeter emission
from these objects is able to penetrate the dust and thus allow us to
investigate the complex processes that occur at the earliest phases of
stellar evolution.
A search for massive stars in the formation stage
The best possible comprehension of this crucial stage of the
stellar life cycle constitutes a key to the understanding of the
formation and evolution of galaxies. And in this context, it is
especially the massive stars with their powerful radiation fields,
strong stellar winds and dramatic final interaction with the
interstellar medium through supernova explosions that dominate the
energetics of normal galaxies. Massive stars live much shorter (about
1 million years) than lighter solar-type stars (10 – 12,000 million
years) and only they undergo such violent explosions at the end.
A most challenging question in current astrophysics is therefore
concerned with the nature of the various physical processes that take
place during the formation of massive stars. It is for instance still
unclear whether massive stars form like lower-mass stars of the solar
type do, i.e., by accretion of gas from the surrounding cloud during a
progressive contraction process, or if they are rather the results of
stellar collisions in dense clusters.
The only way to know is by finding the youngest massive stars and
then to study them in detail by means of spectroscopic
observations. At the same time, their immediate surroundings, e.g.,
the stellar population in the star-forming cluster of which they are
members, must also be investigated before the full picture will
emerge.
Massive stars in Messier 17
ESO Press Photo 24b/00 |
PR Photo |
It is in this context that new infrared observations have been made
of the inner regions of Messier 17. In the area to the
south-west of the centre of this nebula, shown in PR Photo
24a/00, several objects appear very red – this clearly identifies
them as very young stars.
An infrared spectrum of one of the reddest objects that was only
detected at the longest wavelength (the Ks band; cf. PR Photo
24b/00), confirmed it as a massive star in its earliest
evolutionary phase.
The spectrum shows a featureless “continuum” that rises steeply
towards long wavelengths, exactly as expected for a star in the
process of formation, deeply embedded in dust. It is easily
distinguishable from stars that have already formed, since their
spectra display several absorption features and rise towards shorter
wavelengths instead.
This is the caption to ESO PR Photos 24a-b/00. They may be
reproduced, if credit is given to the European Southern
Observatory.