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THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS. Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003. Overview of Presentation. Theoretical overview Confrontation with theory: what we know and how we know it Current key questions Answering key questions. Theory.
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THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003
Overview of Presentation • Theoretical overview • Confrontation with theory: • what we know and how we know it • Current key questions • Answering key questions
Stellar Conception • A star’s life begins in darkness, in an optically opaque molecular cloud • Shielded by dust and gas from galactic starlight and cosmic rays, the cloud cools • In the densest clumps of molecular gas, gravity overcomes internal pressure: clumps contract
Pressure ~ T Gravity ~ M/R2 A Collapsing Molecular Clump
Stellar Gestation • Clumps are initially spinning as well • a result of tidal encounters among clumps • Spinning, collapsing clumps produce: • a flattened envelope from which material flows toward a …. • circumstellar disk, through which material flows toward a…. • central, prestellar core (a “stellar seed”)
Accretion Disk Stellar seed Infalling envelope Forming the Star-Disk System
Building a Full-Term Star • Gas and dust transported: envelope accretion disk stellar seed • Stellar mass builds up over time (~ 1 Myr) • Accreting material arises from regions that rotate • absent a way of slowing down the star, the star will rotate so rapidly that material is flung off the equator • a star cannot reach ‘full-term’ absent spin regulation • Stellar winds and jets act as ‘rotation regulators’
Wind/Jet Rotating accretion disk Infalling gas/dust Forming star Accreting material Building a Full-term Star removes angular momentum
Forming Planets • Planets form in circumstellar disks • Two processes may be operative: • disk instabilities leading to rapid agglomeration of gas into giant (Jupiter mass) planets during disk accretion phase • agglomeration of dust into km-size planetesimals • buildup of earth mass solid cores via planetesimal collisions • buildup of gas giants if enough disk gas is available
Formation via Disk Instability Forming Jupiter
Formation via Agglomeration; Collisions Growth of larger bodies via collisions Planetesimal swarm formed via collisions among small dust grains Mature planets
Star and Planet Formation Summary Molecular Cloud Rotating Clump Forming Star + disk
Stellar Conception • Radio maps of molecular clouds reveal rotating pre-stellar clumps • diagnosed via tracers of dense, cold gas: CO, CS • Observations of multiple molecules provide • temperature • density • clump mass • kinematics: internal gas motions; rotation • Clump self-gravity exceeds internal pressure
Star-Forming Molecular Cloud 30 Light Years Ophiuchus Molecular Cloud (d ~ 500 light years)
Opaque Molecular Clump 0.2 light years
Stellar Gestation • Doppler analysis (mm-wave) of gas motions shows • clumps are collapsing • clumps are rotating • Hubble Space Telescope observations reveal • flattened envelopes • opaque disks embedded within envelopes • central star • Doppler analysis (infrared) of gas motions shows • gas accreting onto the central star
Building a Mature Star • Hubble space telescope observations reveal • disks of solar system dimension around young stars • Infrared observations show • spectral signatures expected for accretion disks • Radio observations: disk masses ~ solar system • Doppler analysis (infrared) of gas motions shows • gas accreting onto the central star • winds emanating from star or inner disk • Optical and infrared images reveal • jets emanating from star-disk systems
Implications for Planet Building • In combination, these observations suggest: • accretion disks surround all forming stars • disk masses and sizes are similar to our solar system • As a consequence of the processes that give birth to stars, raw material for planet-building is in place
Evidence for Planetesimal Building • Earth-like planets believed built via planetesimal collisions • produce larger bodies • produce small dust grains as a by-product of collisions • Planetesimals not observed directly • In solar system, evidence of collisions comes from • cratering history (moon; other bodies) • inclination of planet rotation axes • Outside solar system, evidence of collisions come from • light scattered earthward by small dust grains • thermal emission from heated grains • Dust grain population decreases with age • similar to solar system record
A Post-Planet-Building Disk HST Observtions of an IRAS-discovered disk
Evidence for Extrasolar Planets • Reflex Doppler motions in parent stars • periodic signals indicative of orbital motions • velocity amplitudes + periods yield mass estimates • More than 50 systems now known • many contain multiple planets • unexpected distribution of orbital distances • unfavorable for survival of terrestrial planets • Direct evidence of giant planet planet via eclipse • gas envelope inferred from light curve shape
Current Key Questions: Planets • When do planets form? • disk accretion phase? • later, following accretion of disk gas? • How diverse are planetary system architectures? • are close-in (r < 1 AU) Jupiter-mass planets favored? • are planets in habitable zones common or rare? • Can we observe extra-solar planets directly? • can we determine atmospheric structure and chemistry ? • can we detect signatures of life ?
When do Planets Form? • Key observations: • probing accretion disks surrounding young stars and searching for tidal gaps diagnostic of forming planets • searching for gaps in beta-Pic-like disks around mature stars • determining accurate ages for star-disk systems • Key facilities • ALMA • next generation O/IR telescopes • SIRTF + current generation telescopes
Diagnosing Planet Formation: GSMT AURA-NIO Point Design 30-m ground-based telescope Emission from tidal gaps
Diagnosing Planet Formation: ALMA Star at 10pc
SIRTF SIRTF: Artist Conception
Locating Candidate Planetary Systems with SIRTF Inflections in spectra can diagnose gaps in dust disks Dust excess can diagnose planetesimal collision rates
Dust Emission from Planet-Forming Disks: Resolving Candidate Mature Systems Gemini observation of Dust Ring Artist conception of system
How Diverse are Planetary System Architectures? • Key observations • Statistical studies of dust distributions • Precise measurements of reflex motions: • continuation of current radial velocity programs • precise proper motion measurements • Key facilities • SIRTF • SIM (Space Interferometry Mission)
Space Interferometry Mission SIM can (1) detect earth-like planets around nearby stars (2) determine distribution of planetary architectures from statistical studies of large samples of stars
Observing Planets Directly • Key observations • imaging and spectroscopy • Key theoretical work • develop understanding of how to diagnose life from spectroscopic signatures • Key facilities • Devices designed to enable high contrast imaging; spectroscopy • coronagraphs that block out light from central star • use on current (Gemini; Keck) and future (GSMT) ground-based telescopes • infrared interferometers (ground: e.g. Keck; Large Binocular Telescope) • Terrestrial Planet Finder/Darwin (space)
Diagnosing Mature Planets Spectra diagnose structure and chemistry of planetary atmospheres
Terrestrial Planet Finder TPF will have the ability to image and take spectra of earth-like planets surrounding nearby stars
Current Key Questions: Stars • How does the distribution of stellar masses depend on initial conditions? • chemical abundance? • collisions among molecular clouds? • How has star formation activity changed over the lifetime of the universe?
How Stars of Different Mass Form • Key observations • physical conditions and kinematics in molecular clouds • observations of stellar mass distributions in these clouds • Key facilities • ALMA • high spatial resolution maps of molecular clouds • large ground-based telescopes (Gemini; Keck; GSMT) • photometry and spectroscopy of emerging stellar populations