A UNSW-led team has used a telescope in
http://phys.org/news/2014-02-remote-antarctic-telescope-reveals-gas.html#jCp
Using a telescope installed at the driest place on earth - Ridge A in
Giant clouds of molecular gas – the most massive objects in our galaxy – are the birthplaces of stars.
"This newly discovered gas cloud is
shaped like a very long filament, about 200 light years in extent and ten light
years across, with a mass about 50,000 times that of our sun," says team
leader, Professor Michael Burton, an astronomer at UNSW Australia.
"The evidence suggests it is in the early stages of
formation, before any stars have turned on."
The results are published in The Astrophysical
Journal.
The team is using the High Elevation Antarctic Terahertz telescope,
or HEAT, at Ridge A, along with the Mopra telescope at Coonabarabran in NSW, to
map the location of gas clouds in our galaxy from the carbon they contain.
At 4000 metres elevation, Ridge A is one of the coldest
places on the planet, and the driest. The lack of water vapour in the
atmosphere there allows terahertz radiation from space to reach the ground and
be detected.
The PLATO-R robotic observatory with the HEAT telescope was
installed in 2012 by a team led by UNSW physicist, Professor Michael Ashley,
and Dr Craig Kulesa of the University
of Arizona .
A UNSW-led team has used a telescope in Antarctica
to identify a giant gas cloud in our galaxy which appears to be in an early
stage of formation. Image is of the HEAT telescope at Ridge A. Credit: Geoff
Sims
"We now have an autonomous telescope observing our
galaxy from the middle of Antarctica and
getting data, which is a stunning new way of doing science. Ridge A is more
than 900 kilometres from the nearest people, who are at the South Pole, and is
completely unattended for most of the year," says Professor Burton.
The HEAT telescope detects atomic carbon and the Mopra
telescope detects carbon monoxide. "I call it following the galactic
carbon trail," says Professor Burton.
The discovery of the new galactic cloud, which is about
15,000 light years from earth, will help determine how these
mysterious objects develop in the interstellar medium.
One theory is that they are formed from the gravitational
collapse of an ensemble of small clouds into a larger one. Another involves the
random collision of small clouds that then agglomerate. Or it may be that the molecular
gas filament is condensing out of a very large, surrounding
cloud of atomic gas.
About one star per year, on average, is formed in the Milky
Way. Stars that explode and die then replenish the gas clouds as well as moving
the gas about
and mixing it up
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