Hubble sees starburst galaxies create extreme winds

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This illustration released Thursday, based on data from the Hubble Space Telescope, shows the messy, chaotic halo surrounding an active galaxy undergoing bursts of star formation.
This illustration released Thursday, based on data from the Hubble Space Telescope, shows the messy, chaotic halo surrounding an active galaxy undergoing bursts of star formation.ESA / NASA / L. Calcada

By Miriam Kramer

Space.com

Star formation involves more than meets the eye. Huge "starbursts" that give birth to hundreds of millions of new stars at once within galaxies all over the universe seem to affect their host galaxies in surprising ways, a new study reveals.

Astronomers using the Hubble Space Telescope found that the extreme winds created by rapid star formation can be felt up to 650,000 light-years from the center of the galaxy, much farther than previously thought, Hubble mission scientists said in a statement Thursday. Winds from the starbursts actually form halos that reach about 20 times farther into space than the visible size of the galaxy.

"The extended material around galaxies is hard to study, as it’s so faint," said study team member Vivienne Wild of the University of St. Andrews. "But it’s important — these envelopes of cool gas hold vital clues about how galaxies grow, process mass and energy, and finally die. We’re exploring a new frontier in galaxy evolution!" [Hubble's Most Amazing Discoveries]

The scientists were able to create a stunning video of the starburst galaxy's gas halo using the observations by Hubble's powerful Cosmic Origins Spectrograph, or COS.

"Hubble is the only observatory that can carry out the observations necessary for a study like this," said the study's lead author, Sanchayeeta Borthakur of Johns Hopkins University. "We needed a space-based telescope to probe the hot gas, and the only instrument capable of measuring the extended envelopes of galaxies is COS."

Borthakur's team examined 20 galaxies in all different states of star formation nearby the Milky Way. They found that ionized gas — gas that has been excited by the stellar wind — only surrounds galaxies going through starburst periods.

The ionized gas surrounding the galaxies regulates "any future star formation," officials said in the news release. The ionization causes cooler gas to fall, limiting the availability of the gas used to form new stars.

"Starbursts are important phenomena — they not only dictate the future evolution of a single galaxy, but also influence the cycle of matter and energy in the Universe as a whole," study team member Timothy Heckman, an astronomer Johns Hopkins University said in a statement. "The envelopes of galaxies are the interface between galaxies and the rest of the universe — and we’re just beginning to fully explore the processes at work within them."

The Hubble Space Telescope celebrated its 23rd anniversary in orbit this week. The iconic telescope is operated by NASA and the European Space Agency. It launched into space from the space shuttle Discovery on April 24, 1990, and could remain operational until 2020.

Its successor — the $8.8 billion James Webb Space Telescope — is scheduled for launch in 2018. Scientists working with both telescopes hope that the two space telescopes will be functioning on orbit at the same time before Hubble is retired.

The new research will appear in the May 1 issue of The Astrophysical Journal.

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