Meeting
this week in Cambridge, Mass., astronomers using the Submillimeter Array
(SMA) on Mauna Kea, Hawaii, confirmed, for the first time, that many of the
objects termed "proplyds" found in the Orion Nebula do have sufficient material
to form new planetary systems like our own. It now appears that these protoplanetary
disks are quite tenacious, bringing new grounds for optimism in the search
for planetary systems. How Solar Systems Form in Hostile Space based on Harvard, Center for Astronomy report  | | Planetary Protection: X-ray Super-Flares Aid Formation of "Solar Systems" Credit: NASA Chandra | Meeting
this week in Cambridge, Mass., astronomers using the Submillimeter Array
(SMA) on Mauna Kea, Hawaii, confirmed, for the first time, that many of the
objects termed "proplyds" found in the Orion Nebula do have sufficient material
to form new planetary systems like our own. "The SMA is the only
telescope that can measure the dust within the Orion proplyds, and thereby
assess their true potential for forming planets. This is critical in our
understanding of how solar systems form in hostile regions of space," said
Jonathan Williams of the University of Hawaii Institute for Astronomy, lead
author on a paper submitted to The Astrophysical Journal. Surviving
in the chaotic regions within the Orion Nebula where stellar winds can reach
a staggering two million miles per hour and temperatures exceed a searing
18,000 degrees Fahrenheit, the question remained - would enough material
endure to form a new solar system or would it be eroded away into space like
wind and sand eroding away desert cliffs? It now appears that these protoplanetary
disks are quite tenacious, bringing new grounds for optimism in the search
for planetary systems. Imaged by the Hubble Space Telescope back
in the early 1990s as misshapen silhouettes against the nebular background,
the most spectacular proplyds appear bright. Their surrounding ionized cocoons
glow due to their close proximity to a nearby hot star formation called the
Trapezium. The Trapezium is a star cluster consisting of more than 1,000
young, hot stars that are only 1 million years old. They condensed out of
the original cold, dark cloud of gas that now glows from their ionizing light.
They are crowded into a space about 4 light-years in diameter, the same as
the distance between the Sun and Proxima Centauri, the next closest star
in space. Blasted by the solar winds of the Trapezium, the proplyds
are the next generation of smaller stars to arise in Orion, this time with
visible discs that may be forming planets. It has remained unclear, however,
whether they contained enough material to form stable planetary systems.
Using the SMA, astronomers now have been able to probe deep inside these
disks to measure their mass and to unravel the formation process presented
by these potential infant solar systems. | Orion as imaged by VLT. Image Credit: VLT | "While
the Hubble pictures were spectacular, they revealed only disk-like shapes
that did not tell us the amount of material present," said David Wilner,
of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA). Since some of
the discs appear to be comparable in size and mass to our own solar system,
this strengthens the connection between the Orion proplyds and our origins.
Since most Sun-like stars in the Galaxy eventually form in environments
like the Orion Nebula, the SMA results suggest that the formation of solar
systems like our own is common and a continuing event in the Galaxy.
"The same cycle of birth, life and death we experience here on Earth is
repeated in the stars overhead. Now, the SMA provides us with a front-row
seat in unraveling the wonder of these cosmic events," reflected Wilner.
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