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Scientists get a look at the birth of the Milky Way

The giant gas cloud from which the Milky Way formed had to evolve from an overall smooth structure into a clumpy object in less than a few hundred million years.
Provided by the Royal Astronomical Society, United Kingdom
Published: June 21, 2010
Globular cluster M80
An image of the globular star cluster M80 (NGC 6093) made using the Hubble Space Telescope. M80 contains hundreds of thousands of stars and is one of 147 globular clusters known to be associated with the Milky Way.
Photo by The Hubble Heritage Team/AURA/STScI/NASA
June 21, 2010
For the first time, a team of astronomers has succeeded in investigating the earliest phases of the evolutionary history of our Milky Way Galaxy. The scientists, from the Argelander Institute for Astronomy at Bonn University and the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy in Bonn, Germany, deduced that the early galaxy went from smooth to clumpy in just a few hundred million years.

Led by Pavel Kroupa from the Argelander Institute for Astronomy at Bonn University, the researchers looked at the spherical groups of stars &#8212 globular clusters — that lie in the halo of the Milky Way, outside the more familiar spiral arms where the Sun lies. These globular clusters each contain hundreds of thousands of stars and are thought to have formed at the same time as the "proto-galaxy" that eventually evolved into the galaxy we see today.

Globular star clusters can be thought of as fossils from the earliest period of the history of the galaxy, and the astronomers found that they left a hint of the conditions under which they formed. The stars of the clusters condensed out of a cloud of molecular gas (relatively cool hydrogen), not all of which was used up in their formation. The residual gas was expelled by the radiation and winds coming from the freshly hatched population of stars.

"Due to this ejection of gas, the globular clusters expanded and thereby lost the stars that formed at their boundaries," said Michael Marks from the Argelander Institute for Astronomy at Bonn University. "This means that the present shape of the clusters was directly influenced by what happened in the early days of their existence."

The forming Milky Way also shaped the clusters, and the Bonn scientists calculated exactly how the proto-galaxy affected its smaller neighbors. Their results show that the gravitational forces exerted on the star clusters by the proto-Milky Way appear to increase with the metal content of their member stars — in astronomy, metals in stars are elements heavier than helium.

"The amount of iron in a star is therefore an age indicator. The more recently a star cluster was born, the higher the proportion of heavy elements it contains," said Marks. But since the globular clusters are more or less the same age, these age differences can't be large. In order to explain the variation in the forces exerted on different globular clusters, the structure of the Milky Way had to change rapidly within a short time.

The giant gas cloud from which the Milky Way formed had to evolve from an overall smooth structure into a clumpy object in less than a few hundred million years in order to significantly increase the strength of the forces. This time span corresponds to the astronomically short duration in which the proto-galaxy-sized gas cloud collapsed under its own gravity. In parallel, the globular clusters formed successively within the collapsing cloud. The material from which the somewhat younger globular clusters formed, and which according to the results of this investigation felt stronger attractive forces, was previously enriched with heavy elements by fast-evolving stars in the older clusters.

"In this picture, we can elegantly combine the observational and theoretical results and understand why later forming, more metal-rich clusters experienced stronger force fields," Kroupa said. "On the back of this work, for the first time we have a detailed insight into the earliest evolutionary history of our galaxy."
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5 stars
JOHN C KREMER from COLORADO said:
Many globular clusters may contain intermediate size black holes, or so I have heard. These black holes are thought to be roughly around 100 to 10,000 masses the size of the sun. Could the globular clusters be the progenators of galaxies by condensing into central locations that later represent the central hubs of many current galaxies and lead to the development of their super massive black holes? It could be why the globular clusters are remnantes in a halo surrounding the developing galaxies. Globular clusters are overlooked in many theories of galaxy development. The next question asks - how do these globulars develop, and how and where do these intermediate black holes come from?
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