New images
from NASA's Hubble Space Telescope reveal 14 young, runaway stars plowing
through regions of dense interstellar gas, creating brilliant arrowhead
structures and trailing tails of glowing gas.
These
arrowheads, or bow shocks, form when the stars' powerful stellar winds, streams
of matter flowing from the stars, slam into surrounding dense gas. The
phenomenon is similar to that seen when a speeding boat pushes through water on
a lake.
"We
think we have found a new class of bright, high-velocity stellar
interlopers," says astronomer Raghvendra Sahai of NASA's Jet Propulsion
Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., and leader of the Hubble study. "Finding
these stars is a complete surprise because we were not looking for them. When I
first saw the images, I said 'Wow. This is like a bullet speeding through the
interstellar medium.' Hubble's sharp 'eye' reveals the structure and shape of
these bow shocks."
The
astronomers can only estimate the ages, masses, and velocities of these renegade
stars. The stars appear to be young - just millions of years old. Their ages
are based partly on their strong stellar winds.
The work
was presented today at the American Astronomical Society meeting in Long Beach,
Calif.
Most stars
produce powerful winds either when they are very young or very old. Only very
massive stars greater than 10 times the Sun's mass have stellar winds
throughout their lifetimes. But the objects observed by Hubble are not very
massive, because they do not have glowing clouds of ionized gas around them.
They are medium-sized stars that are a few to eight times more massive than the
Sun. The stars are not old because the shapes of the nebulae around aging,
dying stars are very different, and old stars are almost never found near dense
interstellar clouds.
Depending
on their distance from Earth, the bullet-nosed bow shocks could be 100 billion
to a trillion miles wide (the equivalent of 17 to 170 solar system diameters,
measured out to Neptune's orbit). The bow shocks indicate that the stars are
traveling fast, more than 112,000 miles an hour (more than 180,000 kilometers
an hour) with respect to the dense gas they are plowing through, which is
roughly five times faster than typical young stars.
"The
high-speed stars were likely kicked out of their homes, which were probably
massive star clusters," Sahai says.
There are
two possible ways this stellar expulsion could have happened. One way is if
one star in a binary system exploded as a supernova and the partner got kicked
out. Another scenario is a collision between two binary star systems or a
binary system and a third star. One or more of these stars could have picked up
energy from the interaction and escaped the cluster.
Assuming
their youthful phase lasts only a million years and they are moving at roughly
112,000 miles an hour, the stars have traveled about 160 light-years.
Runaway
stars have been seen before. The Infrared Astronomical Satellite (IRAS), which
performed an all-sky infrared survey in 1983, spied a few similar-looking
objects. The first observation of these objects was in the late 1980s. But
those stars produced much larger bow shocks than the stars in the Hubble study,
suggesting that they are more massive stars with more powerful stellar winds.
"The
stars in our study are likely the lower-mass and/or lower-speed counterparts to
the massive stars with bow shocks detected by IRAS," Sahai explained.
"We think the massive runaway stars observed before were just the tip of
the iceberg. The stars seen with Hubble may represent the bulk of the
population, both because many more lower-mass stars inhabit the universe than
higher-mass stars, and because a much larger number are subject to modest speed
kicks."
Astronomers
have not spotted many of these stellar interlopers before because they are hard
to find. "You don't know where to look for them because you cannot predict
where they will be," Sahai says. "So all of them have been found
serendipitously, including the 14 stars we found with Hubble."
Sahai and
his team used Hubble's Advanced Camera for Surveys to examine 35 objects that
appeared as bright infrared sources in the IRAS archive. They were looking for
long-lived pre-planetary nebulae, puffed-up aging stars on the verge of
shedding most of their outer layers to become glowing planetary nebulae.
Instead, the astronomers stumbled upon the runaway stars.
The team is
planning follow-up studies to search for more interlopers, as well as study
selected objects from this Hubble survey in greater detail to understand their
effects on their environments.
"One
of the questions that these very showy encounters raise is what effect they
have on the clouds," says team member Mark Morris of the University of
California, Los Angeles. "Is it an insignificant flash in the pan, or do
the strong winds from these stars stir up the clouds and thereby slow down
their evolution toward forming another generation of stars?"