News on interstellar matter
- Cygnus-X: the cool swan glowing in flight
- New molecules and star formation in the Milkyway
- The dust in the belt of Orion
- Missing dark matter in interstellar space around the Sun
- New 15meter telescope first ligth
- Tiny particles key to understanding early solar system
- New WISE catalog of entire infrared sky
- The Milkyway is full of bubbles
- Discovery of solid buckyballs in space
- Sources of rare Earth-elements found in space
- Dark clouds in Taurus
- Alien matter in the Solar system
- New mapping show cold gas and strange haze
- The sound of the universe
- Discovery of million degrees hot molecular gasses
- Most detailed infrared image of the Carina nebula
- An interstellar star-nursery
- Infrared image of the famous Helix-nebula
- Widefield infrared view of Milkyway's dust
- The smoky core of the Omega Nebula M17
- Star rebels against its parent cloud
- Observation of a cool gas-cloud being swallowed by black hole
- European astronomers discover cocoons of radiation in nebula
- SOFIA airborne observatory views star forming region W40
- The Cool Clouds of the Carina-nebula
|
STarforming nabula have strong magnetic fields
Monday, 28 March 2011 13:20
|
|
| Astronomy - Interstellar matter |
|
New studies of gasflows in starforming interstellar gas-cloud, show that magnetic fields play are larger role in the shaping of the clouds. Magnetic fields play an important role in the formation and evolution of stars, as they stretch around a hot medium like a rubber band and help to determine the flow of material onto or away from the star. One key uncertainty is the amount of energy in the magnetic field as compared with the energy in turbulent motions of the gas. Unfortunately, magnetic fields are poorly understood, in part because they are very difficult to measure directly. Observations during the past few years have dramatically improved our ability to detect and study magnetic fields in star-forming clouds. Former CfA postdoc Hua-bai Li and CfA astronomers Ray Blundell, Abigail Hedden, Scott Paine, and Edward Tong, together with a colleague, used a new instrument working at far infrared wavelengths from a Chilean mountaintop to study the effects of magnetic fields. This CfA Receiver Lab Telescope observed the emission from warm carbon monoxide gas with a velocity resolution able to categorize turbulent motions in the gas. The scientists found evidence of magnetic fields in the molecular cloud around a young stellar core by examining the distribution of velocities of the gas: magnetic fields should constrain gas motions, and the team was able to measure the extent of this influence as they probed the region around the core. Additional evidence for magnetic fields comes from the shape of the cloud core, which appears to be elongated rather than spherical (an asymmetrical shape is expected if magnetic fields are constraining the medium). The new results represent an important advance both in measuring the effects of magnetic fields, and in supporting theoretical models of their influence on the birth of new stars. Source: Harvard |




