Dusty Dark Nebulae and the Origin of Stellar Masses Colloquium: STScI April 08.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
A simple model to explain the high gas content of galaxy UGC 8802 Ruixiang Chang Shanghai Astronomical Observatory Collaborators: Jinliang Hou Shiyin Shen.
Advertisements

H 2 Formation in the Perseus Molecular Cloud: Observations Meet Theory.
Star Birth How do stars form? What is the maximum mass of a new star? What is the minimum mass of a new star?
JWST Science 4-chart version follows. End of the dark ages: first light and reionization What are the first galaxies? When did reionization occur? –Once.
Molecular Gas, Dense Molecular Gas and the Star Formation Rate in Galaxies (near and far) P. Solomon Molecular Gas Mass as traced by CO emission and the.
Turbulence, Feedback, and Slow Star Formation Mark Krumholz Princeton University Hubble Fellows Symposium, April 21, 2006 Collaborators: Rob Crockett (Princeton),
The Origin of Brown Dwarfs Kevin L. Luhman Penn State.
Proto-Brown Dwarf Disks as Products of Protostellar Disk Encounters Sijing Shen, James Wadsley (McMaster) The Western Disk Workshop May 19, 2006.
How do stars get their masses? and A short look ahead Phil Myers CfA Dense Core LXV Newport, RI October 23, 2009.
Dust/Gas Correlation in the Large Magellanic Cloud: New Insights from the HERITAGE and MAGMA surveys Julia Roman-Duval July 14, 2010 HotScI.
Douglas Lin Dept of Astronomy & Astrophysics, Univ California, Santa Cruz Kavli Institute for Astronomy & Astrophysics, Peking University in collaboration.
Galactic and Extragalactic star formation M.Walmsley (Arcetri Observatory)
Global Properties of Molecular Clouds Molecular clouds are some of the most massive objects in the Galaxy. mass: density: > temperature: K ----->
The Interstellar Medium Astronomy 315 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 19.
Star & Planet Formation Alyssa A. Goodman Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.
Radio Astronomy And The Spiral Structure Of The Milky Way Jess Broderick Supervisor: Dr George Warr.
Magnetically Regulated Star Formation in Turbulent Clouds Zhi-Yun Li (University of Virginia) Fumitaka Nakamura (Niigata University) OUTLINE  Motivations.
Main Sequence White Dwarfs Red Giants Red Supergiants Increasing Mass, Radius on Main Sequence The Hertzsprung-Russell (H-R) Diagram Sun.
A Multiphase, Sticky Particle, Star Formation Recipe for Cosmology
Recycling in the Universe
STAR FORMATION STUDIES with the CORNELL-CALTECH ATACAMA TELESCOPE Star Formation/ISM Working Group Paul F. Goldsmith (Cornell) & Neal. J. Evans II (Univ.
Hydrostatic Equilibrium and the Sun’s Core:. Clicker Question: What does does ionized Helium, He II, contain? A: He nucleus only B: He nucleus and one.
Clicker Question: The HR diagram is a plot of stellar A: mass vs diameter. B: luminosity vs temperature C: mass vs luminosity D: temperature vs diameter.
Infall and Outflow. Infall and Outflow Early History: pre-1990* David J. Wilner (CfA) Dense Cores in Dark Clouds LXV: A Symposium in Honor of the 65 th.
Building the Hertzsprung-Russell (H-R) Diagram Use the worksheets passed out in class.
On the Star Formation Rates in GMCs with Marco Lombardi, Joao Alves, Jan Forbrich, Gus Munch Kevin Covey & Carlos Roman.
Modelling Dwarf Galaxies with a Multi-Phase ISM Stefan Harfst 1,2 with: Ch. Theis 3,2 and G. Hensler 3,2 G. Hensler 3,2 1 Rochester Institute of Technology,
ASTR112 The Galaxy Lecture 6 Prof. John Hearnshaw 10. Galactic spiral structure 11. The galactic nucleus and central bulge 11.1 Infrared observations Galactic.
Stellar Winds and Mass Loss Brian Baptista. Summary Observations of mass loss Mass loss parameters for different types of stars Winds colliding with the.
Formation of an IMF-Cluster in a Filamentary Layer Collaborators: F. Adams (Michigan), L. Allen (CfA), R. Gutermuth (CfA), J. Jørgensen (CfA), S. T. Megeath.
TURBULENCE AND HEATING OF MOLECULAR CLOUDS IN THE GALACTIC CENTER: Natalie Butterfield (UIowa) Cornelia Lang (UIowa) Betsy Mills (NRAO) Dominic Ludovici.
Initial Conditions for Star Formation Neal J. Evans II.
8th Sino-German Workshop Kunming, Feb 23-28, 2009 Milky Way vs. M31: a Tale of Two Disks Jinliang HOU In collaboration with : Ruixiang CHANG, Shiyin SHEN,
Interstellar Medium and Star Formation in the Andromeda Galaxy Andreas Schruba California Institute of Technology Adam Leroy, Karin Sandstrom, Fabian Walter,
Star Formation Processes in Stellar Formation Sequence of Events Role of Mass in Stellar Formation Observational Evidence New Theories.
The Gas Properties of Galaxies on and off of a Star-Forming Sequence David Schiminovich + GALEX Science Team Columbia University.
Star Formation in our Galaxy Dr Andrew Walsh (James Cook University, Australia) Lecture 1 – Introduction to Star Formation Throughout the Galaxy Lecture.
A Rotation Pattern with Two Inner LB Resonances
Origin of solar systems 30 June - 2 July 2009 by Klaus Jockers Max-Planck-Institut of Solar System Science Katlenburg-Lindau.
The shapes of the THINGS HI profiles Presented by : Ianjamasimanana Roger Supervisor : Erwin de Blok UNIVERSITY OF CAPE TOWN.
CARMA Large Area Star-formation SurveY  Completing observations of 5 regions of square arcminutes with 7” angular resolution in the J=1-0 transitions.
The Fundamental Problem in studying the stellar lifecycle
Spiral Triggering of Star Formation Ian Bonnell, Clare Dobbs Tom Robitaille, University of St Andrews Jim Pringle IoA, Cambridge.
Is the Initial Mass Function universal? Morten Andersen, M. R. Meyer, J. Greissl, B. D. Oppenheimer, M. Kenworthy, D. McCarthy Steward Observatory, University.
Chapter 17 Astro1010-lee.com UVU Survey of Astronomy Chapter 17 Formation of Stars.
Philamentary Structure and Velocity Gradients in the Orion A Cloud
Chapter 11 The Interstellar Medium
Probing the Birth of Super Star Clusters Kelsey Johnson University of Virginia Hubble Symposium, 2005.
Chemistry and dynamics of the pulsating starless core Barnard 68 Matt Redman National University of Ireland, Galway Matt Redman NUI Galway.
Shinya KomugiNAOJ Chile Observatory + Rie Miura, Sachiko Onodera, Tomoka Tosaki, Nario Kuno + many (NRO Legacy MAGiC team, ASTE team, AzTEC team) NRO UM.
Star Formation and H2 in Damped Lya Clouds
Disk Disruption in Young Embedded Clusters Eva-Marie Proszkow University of Michigan 18 May 2006 Fred Adams (University of Michigan) Phil Myers (Harvard.
14 Dark Matter Join me on the Dark Side. 14 Goals Why do we think there is dark matter? Where do we think it is? How much is there?
The Chemistry of PPN T. J. Millar, School of Physics and Astronomy, University of Manchester.
Mapping CO in the Outer Parts of UV Disks CO Detection Beyond the Optical Radius Miroslava Dessauges Observatoire de Genève, Switzerland Françoise Combes.
In previous episodes …... Stars are formed in the spiral arms of the Galaxy, in the densest and coldest regions of the interstellar medium, which are.
1 Radio – FIR Spectral Energy Distribution of Young Starbursts Hiroyuki Hirashita 1 and L. K. Hunt 2 ( 1 University of Tsukuba, Japan; 2 Firenze, Italy)
The Birth of Stars and Planets in the Orion Nebula K. Smith (STScI)
AST101 Lecture 20 Our Galaxy Dissected. Shape of the Galaxy.
The Evolution of Massive Dense Cores Gary Fuller Holly Thomas Nicolas Peretto University of Manchester.
1 Dynamical Interactions and Brown Dwarfs Michael F. Sterzik, ESO Richard H. Durisen, Indiana University Hierarchical fragmentation and „two-step“ dynamical.
Star Formation: From Cores to Disks
LDN 723: Can molecular emission be used as clock calibrators? Josep Miquel Girart Collaborators: J.M.Masqué,R.Estalella (UB) R.Rao (SMA)
ASTR112 The Galaxy Lecture 5 Prof. John Hearnshaw 8. Galactic rotation 8.3 Rotation from HI and CO clouds 8.4 Best rotation curve from combined data 9.
By: Mike Malatesta Introduction to Open Clusters.
Markus Nielbock studied physics in Düsseldorf and Bochum
Star Formation & Main-sequence Stars
Atomic gas Molecular clouds
Chapter 11 The Interstellar Medium
Life of a Star Formation to Red Giant
Presentation transcript:

Dusty Dark Nebulae and the Origin of Stellar Masses Colloquium: STScI April 08

The Unsolved Problem of Star Formation Boundary Conditions & Initial Conditions Dusty Dark Nebulae and the Origin of Stellar Masses Colloquium: STScI April 08

BOUNDARY CONDITIONS Colloquium: STScI April 08

Compositions, Luminosities, Temperatures, Sizes, & Masses BOUNDARY CONDITIONS Colloquium: STScI April 08

Compositions, Luminosities, Temperatures, Sizes, & Masses BOUNDARY CONDITIONS Colloquium: STScI April 08

Compositions, Luminosities, Temperatures, Sizes, & Masses BOUNDARY CONDITIONS Colloquium: STScI April 08

Compositions, Luminosities, Temperatures, Sizes, & Masses  Once formed, the entire life history of a star is essentially predetermined by a single parameter: the star’s initial mass.  The IMF (the frequency distribution of stellar masses at birth) plays a pivotal role in the evolution of all stellar systems from clusters to galaxies. BOUNDARY CONDITIONS The Initial Mass Function (IMF) = first fundamental boundary condition Colloquium: STScI April 08

HBL DBL Completeness limit Brown Dwarfs Sun The IMF exhibits a broad peak between 0.6 and 0.1 M  suggesting a characteristic mass associated with the star formation process. Brown Dwarfs account for only 1 in 5 objects in IMF! Fundamental Boundary Conditions Muench et al The Initial Mass Function (IMF)

2- Stellar Multiplicity Most (~70%) stars are single! Beichman & Tanner Multiplicity is a function of stellar mass Lada 2006 Fundamental Boundary Conditions

INITIAL CONDITIONS

Stars form in Dense, Dark Cloud Cores Initial Conditions = Basic physical properties of starless cores: mass, size, temperature density, pressure, kinematics

The Team Members: Harvard-Smithsonian CfA: Charles Lada Gus Muench Jill Rathborne Calar Alto Observatory: Joao Alves Carlos Roman-Zuniga European Southern Observatory: Marco Lombardi Basic Properties of the Pipe Cloud: Distance: 130 pc Mass: 10 4 M  SIze: ~3 x 14 pc Star Formation Activity: Insignificant The Pipe Nebula Project Alex Mellinger

Extinction and the Identification and basic properties of dense cores. INITIAL CONDITIONS:

Seeing the Light Through the Dark

10 pc

Core Maps after wavelet decomposition RAWWavelet Decomposed

Distribution of core masses ( 159 cores ) Alves, Lombardi, Lada 2007

Stars Distribution of core masses

Probability Density Function for the Pipe Core Mass Function Pipe CMF IMFs x 3.3 Alves, Lombardi & Lada 2007 Star Formation Efficiency is the Key The IMF derives directly from the CMF after modification by a constant SFE

Mean Core Densities Median Core Density = 7000 cm -3 Lada et al. 2007

Mass – Radius Relation Constant Column Density: M ~ R 2 (Larson’s Laws)

Radio Molecular Lines and the Nature of the Cores

 stem = 0.26 km/s Core to Core Velocity Dispersion (C 18 O)  bowl = 0.28 km/s Muench et al. 2007

Rathborne et al NH 3 Line Survey NH 3 detections indicate n(H 2 ) > 10 4 cm -3

Rathborne et al NH 3 Line Survey NH 3 detections indicate n(H 2 ) > 10 4 cm -3 Radially Stratified Cores

Subsonic Supersonic  NT (km/s)

Dense cores are thermally supported! Such cores must evolve on ACOUSTIC timescales!!

B 68: Radial Density Profile  max = 6.9  0.2 Critical Bonnor-Ebert Sphere

0.18 km/s P thermal / P NT ~ 10-14!! Barnard 68 is a thermally supported Cloud!

Broderick, Keto, Lada & Narayan, 2007 B68 Core Pulsation

P total = P thermal + P NT ISM

Core structure is set by the requirement of pressure equilibrium with external medium! Lada et al. 2007

Pressure and the Origin of Core Masses: From CMF to IMF

The BE Critical Mass corresponds approximately to the characteristic mass of the core mass function! Origin of Cores: Thermal Fragmentation in a Pressurized Medium Non-equilibrium Equilibrium M BE = 1.15 (n s ) -0.5 T 1.5 (solar masses)

IC 348 Taurus Luhman 2004 Luhman et al P/k ~ 10 5 P/k ~ 10 6 From CMF to IMF: Setting the Mass Scale of the IMF The effect of increasing External Pressure m BE = C x a 4 (P surface ) -0.5

IC 348 Taurus Luhman 2004 Luhman et al P/k ~ 10 5 P internal = P thermal + P NT + B 2 /8π The effect of decreasing internal Pressure x 2 m BE = C x a 4 (P surface ) -0.5 From CMF to IMF: Setting the Mass Scale of the IMF  (a effective ) 2 = P internal

High Pressure Regions: Embedded Cluster Cores P/k ~ 10 6 –10 7 K cm -3

Multiplicity increases with stellar mass Multiple Stars Single Stars Fundamental Boundary Condition #2: Stellar Multiplicity

ORIGIN OF THE IMF: **m BE = Constant x a 4 (P surface ) -0.5 Bonnor-Ebert Mass Scale - CMF{logm} = c 1  (log{m/m 0 }, s i ); m 0 = m BE ** IMF{logm} = c 2  (log{m/m 0 }, s k ); m 0 =SFE m BE

ORIGIN OF THE IMF: **m BE = Constant x a 4 (P surface ) -0.5 Bonnor-Ebert Mass Scale - CMF{logm} = c 1  (log{m/m 0 }, s i ); m 0 = m BE ** IMF{logm} = c 2  (log{m/m 0 }, s k ); m 0 =SFE m BE

ORIGIN OF THE IMF: **m BE = Constant x a 4 (P surface ) -0.5 Bonnor-Ebert Mass Scale - CMF{logm} = c 1  (log{m/m 0 }, s i ); m 0 = m BE ** IMF{logm} = c 2  (log{m/m 0 }, s k ); m 0 =SFE m BE Yield = M dg x SFE = b(t) x Δt M dg = mass of dense gas (n>10 4 ) b(t) = stellar birthrate

What determines the Star Formation Rate? (E. Lada 1991) Most stars form in clusters Stars form exclusively in dense (n > 10 4 cm -3 ) gas

What determines the Star Formation Rate?

Lombardi, Lada & Alves 2008

What determines the Star Formation Rate? On GMC scales, the amount of gas ( M DG ) at high density (>10 4 cm -3 ) and high extinction (A V > 6-10 mag;  gas > 100 M  pc -2 ) SFR =  SF M DG /  SF Conjecture: SFR ~ M DG  SF =  ff ~ (G  ) -1/2 for n = 10 4 cm -3 :  ff = 3 x 10 5 yrs = constant

What determines the Star Formation Rate? On GMC scales, the amount of gas ( M DG ) at high density (>10 4 cm -3 ) and high extinction (A V > 6-10 mag;  gas > 100 M  pc -2 ) SFR =  SF M DG /  SF if  SF ~ (G  ) -1/2 then SFR ~  3/2 Conjecture: Gao & Solomon 2004 SFR ~ M DG

What determines the Star Formation Rate? if  SF ~ (G  ) -1/2 then SFR ~  3/2 Conjecture:  SFR = A (  gas ) 1.6 Kennicutt 1998 Schmidt-Kennicutt Law On GMC scales, the amount of gas (M DG ) at high density (>10 4 cm -3 ) and high extinction (A V > 6-10 mag;  gas > 100 M  pc -2 )  DG ~ (  gas ) 1.6 On the other hand:

What determines the Star Formation Rate? Conjecture:  SFR = A (  gas ) 1.6 Kennicutt 1998 Schmidt-Kennicutt Law P gas ~ (a eff ) 2 On GMC scales, the amount of gas (M DG ) at high density (>10 4 cm -3 ) and high extinction (A V > 6-10 mag;  gas > 100 M  pc -2 )

What determines the Star Formation Rate? Conjecture:  SFR = A (  gas ) 1.6 Kennicutt 1998 Schmidt-Kennicutt Law P gas ~  G (  gas ) 2  SFR ~ (P gas ) n ; n = ¾ (?) On GMC scales, the amount of gas (M DG ) at high density (>10 4 cm -3 ) and high extinction (A V > 6-10 mag;  gas > 100 M  pc -2 )

Conclusions: 1- Distribution of core masses similar to stellar IMF but shifted to higher masses by factor of SFE ≈ 25-30% 3- Cores are DENSE CORES 4- Cores are THERMALLY supported 5- Cores are PRESSURE CONFINED: P surface = P external 6- BE mass  CMF characteristic mass: thermal fragmentation under PRESSURE

ORIGIN OF THE IMF: **m BE = Constant x a 4 (P external ) -0.5 Bonnor-Ebert Mass Scale The IMF produced in a star forming event may be determined by only a few very basic physical parameters, e.g., Temperature and External Pressure. The IMF produced in a star forming event may be determined by only a few very basic physical parameters, e.g., Temperature and External Pressure. - CMF{logm} = c 1  (log{m/m 0 }, s i ); m 0 = m BE ** IMF{logm} = c 2  (log{m/m 0 }, s k ); m 0 =SFE m BE

The End !

Pressure Pressure ! Pressure Three things to remember from this talk: