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Two cosmic peacocks show violent history of Magellanic Clouds by Staff Writers Tokyo, Japan (SPX) Nov 15, 2019
Two peacock-shaped gaseous clouds were revealed in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) by observations with the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA). A team of astronomers found several massive baby stars in the complex filamentary clouds, which agrees well with computer simulations of giant collisions of gaseous clouds. The researchers interpret this to mean that the filaments and young stars are telltale evidence of violent interactions between the LMC and the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC) 200 million years ago. Astronomers know that stars are formed in collapsing clouds in space. However, the formation processes of giant stars, 10 times or more massive than the Sun, are not well understood because it is difficult to pack such a large amount of material into a small region. Some researchers suggest that interactions between galaxies provide a perfect environment for massive star formation. Due to the colossal gravity, clouds in the galaxies are stirred, stretched, and often collide with each other. A huge amount of gas is compressed in an unusually small area, which could form the seeds of massive stars. A research team used ALMA to study the structure of dense gas in N159, a bustling star-formation region in the LMC. Thanks to ALMA's high resolution, the team obtained a detailed map of the clouds in two sub-regions, N159E-Papillon Nebula and N159W South. Interestingly, the cloud structures in the two regions look very similar: fan-shaped filaments of gas extending to the north with the pivots in the southernmost points. The ALMA observations also found several massive baby stars in the filaments in the two regions. "It is unnatural that in two regions separated by 150 light-years, clouds with such similar shapes were formed and that the ages of the baby stars are similar," says Kazuki Tokuda, a researcher at Osaka Prefecture University and the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan. "There must be a common cause of these features. Interaction between the LMC and SMC is a good candidate." In 2017, Yasuo Fukui, a professor at Nagoya University and his team revealed the motion of hydrogen gas in the LMC and found that a gaseous component right next to N159 has a different velocity than the rest of the clouds. They suggested a hypothesis that the starburst is caused by a massive flow of gas from the SMC to the LMC, and that this flow originated from a close encounter between the two galaxies 200 million years ago. The pair of peacock-shaped clouds in the two regions revealed by ALMA fits nicely with this hypothesis. Computer simulations show that many filamentary structures are formed in a short time after a collision of two clouds, which also backs this idea. "For the first time, we uncovered a link between massive star formation and galaxy interactions in very sharp detail," says Fukui, the lead author of one of the research papers. "This is an important step in understanding the formation process of massive star clusters in which galaxy interactions have a big impact."
Research Reports: "An ALMA View of Molecular Filaments in the Large Magellanic Cloud I: The Formation of High-Mass Stars and Pillars in the N159E-Papillon Nebula Triggered by a Cloud-Cloud Collision," and "An ALMA View of Molecular Filaments in the Large Magellanic Cloud II: An Early Stage of High-Mass Star Formation Embedded at Colliding Clouds in N159W-South"
Milky Way's Big Black Hole Hurls Star to Infinity and Beyond Canberra, Australia (SPX) Nov 14, 2019 An international study has discovered a star travelling at more than six million km/h through the Milky Way after being flung from the centre of our galaxy by a supermassive black hole. The eviction occurred about five million years ago, around the time when our ancestors were just learning to walk upright. Emeritus Professor Gary Da Costa, an astronomer at The Australian National University (ANU), said the star is moving so fast that it will leave the Milky Way in about 100 million years, n ... read more
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