Solving a 30-year-old problem in high mass star formation

(Nanowerk News) Some 30 years ago, astronomers found that regions of ionized gas around young high mass stars remain small (under a third of a light-year) for ten times longer than they should if they were to expand as expected in simple models. Recent supercomputer simulations predicted that these regions actually flicker in brightness over this period rather than grow continuously. Observations from a team of researchers using the Jansky Very Large Array (VLA) over a 23-year period have confirmed that such flickering actually occurs.
The lives of stars like the Sun are relatively easy to understand, because they are numerous, and live for billions of years. High mass stars, however, are rare and live for only a few million years. As a result, understanding their early evolution has been a challenge. Simple models would suggest that when high mass stars become hot enough to ionize the gas around them, heating it to thousands of degrees, the gas will quickly expand. However, as this happens, the massive stars continue to collect material via their gravitational attraction. As a result, the regions of ionized gas around a star may not simply grow, but instead interact with the infalling material, causing them to flicker in size and brightness during the main assembly phase of the massive stars.
bservations of the massive star forming region Sgr B2
Observations of the massive star forming region Sgr B2 were made with the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA) in 1989 and 2012. The VLA has been operational since 1980 and received a major upgrade that was completed in 2011. (Image: NRAO/AUI)
The new observations confirming the occurrence of such flickering were published recently in The Astrophysical Journal ("Flickering of 1.3 cm Sources in Sgr B2: Toward a Solution to the Ultracompact H II Region Lifetime Problem") by a collaboration of theorists and observers at Agnes Scott College, Universität Zürich, American Museum of Natural History, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, National Radio Astronomy Observatory, European Southern Observatory, and Universität Heidelberg.
Since the VLA was dedicated in 1980, astronomers have observed a large number of regions of ionized hydrogen (so-called H II regions) around high-mass stars that were very small, so small they were termed ultracompact. These early observations conflicted with existing models, which predicted that only the very youngest regions should be so small, and hence, they should be rarely seen. Several models have been proposed to explain this discrepancy, but the recent numerical work made a testable prediction that differed from the other models. If the cause of the small size was the continued infall of material, these radio sources should flicker and the changes in brightness should be detectable over a 20-year period.
“In astronomy it is a rare occurrence to see sources vary on such short timescales, ” said Thomas Peters from Universität Zürich, who led the numerical simulations. “But the regions we predicted to change are huge, almost a thousand times larger than the Solar System!”
The researchers, led by Chris De Pree, professor of astronomy and director of the Bradley Observatory at Agnes Scott College, used VLA observations of the Sagittarius B2 region made in 1989 and again in 2012. This massive star forming region located near the Galactic center contains many small regions of ionized gas around high mass stars, providing a large number of candidates for flickering.
“In the old theoretical model, a high-mass star forms, the HII region lights up and begins to expand, everything was neat and tidy,” De Pree said. “But the group of theorists I am working with were running numerical models that showed accretion was continuing during star formation, and that material was continuing to fall in toward the star after the HII region had formed.”
De Pree’s group chose Sagittarius B2 because the region contains more than 40 ultracompact HII regions. “Since there are so many sources, you can look for changes in relative brightness,” De Pree said. Between 1989 and 2012, four of the HII regions indeed changed in brightness significantly.
“The long term trend is still the same, that HII regions expand with time,” De Pree said. “But in detail, they get brighter or get fainter and then recover. Careful measurements over time can observe this more detailed process.”
Source: Agnes Scott College