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Webb Telescope will investigate cosmic jets from young stars by Christine Pulliam for STSI News Baltimore MD (SPX) Nov 15, 2018
The formation of a star sounds like a simple process: a cloud of gas collapses in on itself, growing denser and hotter until nuclear fusion ignites and a star begins to shine. The reality is more complex and dramatic. Swirling gas spins faster and faster, threatening to rip the still-forming star into pieces. Clumps of matter are captured within a tangle of magnetic fields and squirt outward at supersonic speeds. All of it happens within a dusty shroud that blocks visible light. NASA's James Webb Space Telescope will penetrate that dusty veil and reveal new secrets of star birth. As an interstellar gas cloud contracts, it spins more rapidly, just as a twirling ice skater does when she draws in her arms. The only way for the gas to continue moving inward is for some of the spin (known as angular momentum) to be removed. In a process that's still not fully understood, magnetic fields funnel some of the swirling material into twin jets that shoot outward in opposite directions. These jets travel at speeds of hundreds of miles per second and spread across light-years of space. "Jets are signposts of star formation," said Tom Ray, an astronomer at the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies. Ray and many other scientists are planning to use Webb to study these jets and stellar outflows. Their goals include learning more about how stars form, and how their jets interact with the surrounding interstellar medium of gas and dust.
Shock Waves in Space The material in those jets is traveling at supersonic speeds. When it slams into surrounding material, it creates a shock wave, much like the "sonic boom" of a supersonic aircraft. The shock heats the interstellar gas, causing it to glow at specific wavelengths of light that depend on the conditions within the shock wave itself. "With Webb, we'll be able to dissect the interactions of the protostar with its surroundings that were previously blurred into a single blob," said Ewine van Dishoeck of Leiden University. Webb's exquisite angular resolution will allow it to pick up the tiniest details. This will allow it to see solar-system-scale features at the distance of objects like HH 212. And since the farther along a jet you go from the protostar, the longer the time since the material was ejected, astronomers can probe the history of the star's matter-gathering or accretion process. "Webb has higher sensitivity and higher angular resolution at long infrared wavelengths than anything we could do previously. Webb will answer questions we can't answer from the ground," said Alberto Noriega-Crespo of the Space Telescope Science Institute. Webb also will precisely discern different wavelengths of infrared light. This will allow it to detect infrared light from a variety of chemical elements associated with the shock wave, including iron, neon and sulfur.
A New Star Emerges "By studying HH 212, and objects like it, we want to learn how jets and outflows help the star escape from its cocoon," said Mark McCaughrean of the European Space Agency. The observations described here will be taken as part of Webb's Guaranteed Time Observation (GTO) program. The GTO program provides dedicated time to the scientists who have worked with NASA to craft the science and instrument capabilities of Webb throughout its development.
Giant mirror-coating chamber arrives on Cerro Pachon Tucson AZ (SPX) Nov 14, 2018 The coating chamber for the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST) arrived on the summit of Cerro Pachon today, safely completing a 15-week journey from Deggendorf, Germany, where it was constructed. The 128-ton coating chamber is the largest single piece of equipment to arrive at the LSST observatory site to date and will soon be joined by the telescope mount assembly (TMA), from Spain, and the 8.4-meter primary/tertiary (M1M3) mirror, from the United States, which are expected to arrive in 2019. ... read more
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