الثلاثاء، 31 يوليو 2012

Image of the Day: Rare Glimpse of a Spectacular Protostar

Image of the Day: Rare Glimpse of a Spectacular Protostar
Image of the Day: Rare Glimpse of a Spectacular Protostar The Daily Galaxy --Great Discoveries Channel: Sci, Space, TechFollow the Daily GalaxyAdd Daily Galaxy to igoogle page AddThis Feed Button Join The Daily Galaxy Group on Facebook Follow The Daily Galaxy Group on twitter  « "Hacking the Universe"--Stephen Hawking Launches the Cosmos Supercomputer |Main| Fermi Sleuths Find 5,000-Year-Old Pulsar Rotating 7 Times per Second »

July 24, 2012 Image of the Day: Rare Glimpse of a Spectacular Protostar

 

            R-STAR-BIRTH-large570

 

Using combined data from a trio of orbiting X-ray telescopes, including NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory and the Japan-led Suzaku satellite, astronomers have obtained a rare glimpse of the powerful magnetic fields that drive torrents of gas into the stellar surface, where they heat large areas to millions of degrees. X-rays emitted by these hot spots betray the newborn star's rapid rotation, showing that it is spinning so quickly it is on the verge of breaking up.

The nebula M78, a star formation region located in our galaxy about 1300 light years from earth harbors McNeil's Nebula, first noticed in 2004 when it was lit up by a protostar named V1647 Orionis, a stellar infant still partly swaddled in its birth cloud. Protostars have not yet developed the energy-generating capabilities of a normal star such as the sun, which fuses hydrogen into helium in its core. For V1647 Ori, that stage lies millions of years in the future. Until then, the protostar shines from the heat energy released by the gas that continues to fall onto it, much of which originates in a rotating circumstellar disk.

V1647's agnetic fields and intense X-ray hot spots thousands of times hotter than the rest of the star, are thought to be the footprints of streams that transfer gas from a disk that still surrounds the young star. Scientists think that magnetic reconnection events--the energy source for outbursts from our own sun--channel and drive the gas flows. The star, which spins once in about a day, rotates faster than the disk, and constantly winds up the magnetic fields, which release a great deal of energy when they snap back into lower-energy states. This protostar's X-ray variations are giving astronomers a rare glimpse of energetic phenomena accompanying the "toddler" phase of a low-mass star.*The team found strong similarities among 11 separate X-ray light curves based on data from Chandra, Suzaku and the European Space Agency's XMM-Newton satellites. V1647 Ori is among the youngest stars whose spin rates have been determined using an X-ray-based technique.

The Daily Galaxy via the Chandra X-Ray Observatory


 

 

Posted at 09:15 AM | Permalink



Comments

That is really cool!

Posted by:Nate |July 24, 2012 at 11:56 AM

The scientist's have collaborated big-bang behinds saying "The star shines from the heat energy of gas that falls on it." Electric current flows through a plasma knot called a birkeland current. The polar jets are mostly water vapor for protostars, and this expelling force forms the spiral ring shaped disc by electromagnetic forces. The photo proves gravity is not involved in star formation and Superconductivity is
holograpic galaxy

Posted by:Holo |July 26, 2012 at 04:49 PM


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