Herschel Discovers Some of the Youngest Stars Ever Seen

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March 19, 2013

J.D. Harrington 
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-5241 
j.d.harrington@xxxxxxxx 

Whitney Clavin 
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. 
818-354-4673 
whitney.clavin@xxxxxxxxxxxx 


RELEASE: 13-078

HERSCHEL DISCOVERS SOME OF THE YOUNGEST STARS EVER SEEN

WASHINGTON -- Astronomers have found some of the youngest stars ever 
seen thanks to the Herschel space observatory, a European Space 
Agency mission with important NASA contributions. 

Observations from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope and the Atacama 
Pathfinder Experiment (APEX) telescope in Chile, a collaboration 
involving the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy in Germany, 
the Onsala Space Observatory in Sweden, and the European Southern 
Observatory in Germany, contributed to the findings. 

Dense envelopes of gas and dust surround the fledging stars known as 
protostars, making their detection difficult. The 15 newly observed 
protostars turned up by surprise in a survey of the biggest site of 
star formation near our solar system, located in the constellation 
Orion. The discovery gives scientists a peek into one of the earliest 
and least understood phases of star formation. 

"Herschel has revealed the largest ensemble of such young stars in a 
single star-forming region," said Amelia Stutz, lead author of a 
paper to be published in The Astrophysical Journal and a postdoctoral 
researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy in Heidelberg, 
Germany. "With these results, we are getting closer to witnessing the 
moment when a star begins to form." 

Stars spring to life from the gravitational collapse of massive clouds 
of gas and dust. This changeover from stray, cool gas to the ball of 
super-hot plasma we call a star is relatively quick by cosmic 
standards, lasting only a few hundred thousand years. Finding 
protostars in their earliest, most short-lived and dimmest stages 
poses a challenge. 

Astronomers long had investigated the stellar nursery in the Orion 
Molecular Cloud Complex, a vast collection of star-forming clouds, 
but had not seen the newly identified protostars until Herschel 
observed the region. 

"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." 

Herschel spied the protostars in far-infrared, or long-wavelength, 
light, which can shine through the dense clouds around burgeoning 
stars that block out higher-energy, shorter wavelengths, including 
the light our eyes see. 

The Herschel Photodetector Array Camera and Spectrometer (PACS) 
instrument collected infrared light at 70 and 160 micrometers in 
wavelength, comparable to the width of a human hair. Researchers 
compared these observations to previous scans of the star-forming 
regions in Orion taken by Spitzer. Extremely young protostars 
identified in the Herschel views but too cold to be picked up in most 
of the Spitzer data were further verified with radio wave 
observations from the APEX ground telescope. 

"Our observations provide a first glimpse at protostars that have just 
begun to 'glow' at far-infrared wavelengths," said paper coauthor 
Elise Furlan, a postdoctoral research associate at the National 
Optical Astronomy Observatory in Tucson, Ariz. 

Of the 15 newly discovered protostars, 11 possess very red colors, 
meaning their light output trends toward the low-energy end of the 
electromagnetic spectrum. This output indicates the stars are still 
embedded deeply in a gaseous envelope, meaning they are very young. 
An additional seven protostars previously seen by Spitzer share this 
characteristic. Together, these 18 budding stars comprise only five 
percent of the protostars and candidate protostars observed in Orion. 
That figure implies the very youngest stars spend perhaps 25,000 
years in this phase of their development, a mere blink of an eye 
considering a star like our sun lives for about 10 billion years. 

Researchers hope to chronologically document each stage of a star's 
development rather like a family album, from before birth to early 
infancy, when planets also take shape. 

"With these recent findings, we add an important missing photo to the 
family album of stellar development," said Glenn Wahlgren, Herschel 
Program Scientist at NASA Headquarters in Washington. "Herschel has 
allowed us to study stars in their infancy." 

Herschel is a European Space Agency mission, with science instruments 
provided by a consortia of European institutes with important 
participation by NASA. NASA's Herschel Project Office is based at the 
agency's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. 

For more about Herschel, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/herschel 

and 

http://www.esa.int/SPECIALS/Herschel/index.html 

	
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