Exploding massive stars drive galactic winds
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Exploding massive stars drive galactic winds

Last Updated: Wednesday, August 22, 2012, 16:49     A- A A+
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Exploding massive stars drive galactic winds  Washington: Sifting through images and data from three telescopes, a team of astronomers found 29 objects with outflowing winds measuring up to 2,500 kilometers per second, an order of magnitude faster than most observed galactic winds.

Fierce galactic winds powered by an intense burst of star formation may blow gas right out of massive galaxies, shutting down their ability to make new stars.

“They’re nearly blowing themselves apart,” said Aleksandar Diamond-Stanic, a fellow at the University of California’s Southern California Center for Galaxy Evolution, who led the study.

“Most galactic winds are more like fountains; the outflowing gas will fall back onto the galaxies. With the high-velocity winds we’ve observed the outflowing gas will escape the galaxy and never return,” he stated.

The galaxies they observed are a few billion light-years away with outflowing winds of 500 to 2,500 kilometers per second. Initially they thought the winds might be coming from quasars, but a closer look revealed these winds emanate from entire galaxies.

Young, bright and compact, these massive galaxies are in the midst of or just completing a period of star formation as intense as anyone has ever observed.

“These galactic-scale crazy-fast winds are probably driven by the really massive stars exploding and pushing out the gas around them,” said Alison Coil, professor in UC San Diego’s Center for Astrophysics and Space Sciences and a co-author of the paper.

“There’s just such a high density of those stars it’s like all these bombs went off near each other at the same time. Each bomb evacuates the area around it, then the next can push gas out further until they’re evacuating gas on the scale of the whole galaxy,” Coil noted.

Galaxies with winds this fast are also quite rare, opening up the question of whether these are unusual events or part of a common phase in the evolution of massive galaxies that is seldom observed because it is so brief.

Astrophysicists still lack an explanation for how and why star-making ends. Theorists who model the evolution of galaxies often invoke supermassive black holes called active galactic nuclei, which can also generate savage winds, to explain how gas needed to form stars can be depleted.

These new observations demonstrate that black holes may not be necessary to account for how these kinds galaxies run out of gas.

“The winds seem to be powered by the starburst. The central supermassive black hole is apparently just a spectator for these massive stellar fireworks,” Diamond-Stanic said.

Diamond-Stanic and colleagues published their findings in Astrophysical Journal Letters.

ANI

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First Published: Wednesday, August 22, 2012, 16:49

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katesisco - usa
Researchers note these winds are from 22 super dense galaxies thus the starbursts. I wonder if this is the maximum form of galactic wind.I theorize that the galactic wind that is much less is found in all galaxies as the normal response to the Nuker ration of 1/2 of 1% black hole to galaxy being exceeded. Instead of an axial jet what is produces is an equatorial jet that passes through the galactic equator to end up at the galactic rim as matter, this would explain new sun/planet on the galactic rim or at the edge of clusters.
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