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Published by C1ay 10-20-2005
NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory revealed a new generation of stars spawned by a super-massive black hole at the center of the Milky Way galaxy. This novel mode of star formation may solve several mysteries about these super-massive black holes that reside at the centers of nearly all galaxies.

"Massive black holes are usually known for violence and destruction," said Sergei Nayakshin of the University of Leicester, United Kingdom. "So it's remarkable this black hole helped create new stars, not just destroy them."

Black holes have earned their fearsome reputation because any material, including stars, that falls within their "event horizon" is never seen again. These new results indicate immense disks of gas, orbiting many black holes at a safe distance from the event horizon, can help nurture the formation of new stars. This conclusion comes from new clues that could only be revealed in X-rays. Until the latest Chandra results, researchers have disagreed about the origin of a mysterious group of massive stars discovered by infrared astronomers.

The stars, orbiting less than a light year from the Milky Way's central black hole, are known as Sagittarius A* (Sgr A*). At such close distances to Sgr A*, the standard model for star forming gas clouds predicts they should have been ripped apart by tidal forces from the black hole. Two models, based on previous research, to explain this puzzle have been proposed. In the disk model, the gravity of a dense disk of gas around Sgr A* offsets the tidal forces and allows stars to form.

In the migration model, the stars formed in a cluster far away from the black hole and then migrated in to form the ring of massive stars. The migration scenario predicts about a million low mass, sun-like stars in and around the ring. In the disk model, the number of low mass stars could be much less.

Researchers used Chandra observations to compare the X-ray glow from the region around Sgr A* to the X-ray emission from thousands of young stars in the Orion Nebula star cluster. They found the Sgr A* star cluster contains only about 10,000 low mass stars, thereby ruling out the migration model. Because the galactic center is shrouded in dust and gas, it has not been possible to look for the low-mass stars in optical observations. X-ray data have allowed astronomers to penetrate the veil of gas and dust and look for these low mass stars.

This research, coauthored by Nayakshin and Rashid Sunyaev of the Max Plank Institute for Physics in Garching, Germany, will appear in an upcoming issue of the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.

"In one of the most inhospitable places in our galaxy, stars have prevailed," Nayakshin said. "It appears star formation is much more tenacious than we previously believed. We can say the stars around Sgr A* were not deposited there by some passing star cluster, rather they were born there," Sunyaev said. "There have been theories that this was possible, but this is the first real evidence. Many scientists are going to be very surprised by these results."

The research suggests the rules of star formation change when stars form in the disk surrounding a giant black hole. Because this environment is very different from typical star formation regions, there is a change in the proportion of stars that form. For example, there is a much higher percentage of massive stars in the disks around black holes.

Source: NASA
  #1  
By CraigD on 10-20-2005
Arrow Re: Stars Form Surprisingly Close to Milky Way's Black Hole

This looks like a near identical repeat of the observation described in ”Hubble Finds Mysterious Disk of Blue Stars Around Black Hole”, except rather than Andromeda, this one’s in our own Milky Way. Comments from the Andromeda thread should apply here, too.
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  #2  
By Tormod on 10-20-2005
Re: Stars Form Surprisingly Close to Milky Way's Black Hole

Very interesting article. This shows that there is still a mystery as to what is actually at the galactic core, and how black holes really behave.
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  #3  
By C1ay on 10-20-2005
Re: Stars Form Surprisingly Close to Milky Way's Black Hole

Quote:
Originally Posted by CraigD
This looks like a near identical repeat of the observation described in ”Hubble Finds Mysterious Disk of Blue Stars Around Black Hole”, except rather than Andromeda, this one’s in our own Milky Way. Comments from the Andromeda thread should apply here, too.
Yeah. I did a double take myself and went searching to make sure it wasn't the same news release I posted before. This shows that they have now found similar behavior at the core of two seperate galaxies using two seperate methods. It seems to indicate that there are definitely some behavior at work around black holes that we don't understand yet.
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