Some of galaxy's youngest stars observed
23 March Daily Top
NASA says the European Herschel space telescope mission it
contributes to has found some of the youngest stars ever seen, known as
protostars.
The 15 newly observed protostars turned up by surprise in a European
Space Agency survey of the biggest site of star formation near our solar
system, located in the constellation Orion, NASA reported .
The discovery could help scientists understand one of the earliest
and least understood phases of star formation, it said.
Herschel has revealed the largest ensemble of such young stars in a
single star-forming region," Amelia Stutz at the Max Planck Institute
for Astronomy in Heidelberg, Germany, said.
"With these results, we are getting closer to witnessing the moment
when a star begins to form."
Stars form in the gravitational collapse of massive clouds of gas and
dust, and the transition from diffuse gas to a super-hot star happens
relatively quickly by astronomical standards, which makes finding
protostars in the first phase of this change difficult, researchers
said.
Previous studies have missed the densest, youngest and potentially
most extreme and cold protostars in Orion," Stutz said.
"These sources may be able to help us better understand how the
process of star formation proceeds at the very earliest stages, when
most of the stellar mass is built up and physical conditions are hardest
to observe."
The Herschel space telescope was able to observe the protostars in
infrared light, which can shine through surrounding gas clouds that
block out higher-energy wavelengths including visible light.
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