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THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

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Page 1: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS

Stephen E. Strom

National Optical Astronomy Observatory

07 January, 2003

Page 2: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Overview of Presentation

• Theoretical overview

• Confrontation with theory: – what we know and how we know it

• Current key questions

• Answering key questions

Page 3: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Theory

Page 4: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Stellar Conception

• A star’s life begins in darkness, in an optically opaque molecular cloud

• Shielded by dust and gas from galactic starlight and cosmic rays, the cloud cools

• In the densest clumps of molecular gas, gravity overcomes internal pressure: clumps contract

Page 5: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

A Collapsing Molecular Clump

Pres

sure

~ T

Gravity ~ M/R2

Page 6: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Stellar Gestation

• Clumps are initially spinning as well– a result of tidal encounters among clumps

• Spinning, collapsing clumps produce:– a flattened envelope from which material flows toward a ….

– circumstellar disk, through which material flows toward a….

– central, prestellar core (a “stellar seed”)

Page 7: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Spinning Protostellar Core

Page 8: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Infalling envelope

Forming the Star-Disk System

Stellar seedAccretion Disk

Page 9: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Building a Full-Term Star

• Gas and dust transported: envelope accretion disk stellar seed• Stellar mass builds up over time (~ 1 Myr)• Accreting material arises from regions that rotate

– absent a way of slowing down the star, the star will rotate so rapidly that material is flung off the equator

– a star cannot reach ‘full-term’ absent spin regulation

• Stellar winds and jets act as ‘rotation regulators’

Page 10: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Building a Full-term Star

Wind/JetRotating accretion disk

Accreting material Forming star

Infalling gas/d

ustremoves angular momentum

Page 11: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

A Star in Formation: Artist Conception

Page 12: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Forming Planets

• Planets form in circumstellar disks

• Two processes may be operative:

– disk instabilities leading to rapid agglomeration of gas into

giant (Jupiter mass) planets during disk accretion phase

– agglomeration of dust into km-size planetesimals

• buildup of earth mass solid cores via planetesimal collisions

• buildup of gas giants if enough disk gas is available

Page 13: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Formation via Disk Instability

Forming Jupiter

Page 14: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Formation via Agglomeration; Collisions

Planetesimal swarm formed via collisions among small dust grains

Growth of larger bodies via collisions

Mature planets

Page 15: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Star and Planet Formation Summary

Molecular Cloud

Rotating Clump

Forming Star + disk

Page 16: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Confrontation with theory:What we know and how we know it

Page 17: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Stellar Conception

• Radio maps of molecular clouds reveal rotating pre-stellar clumps– diagnosed via tracers of dense, cold gas: CO, CS

• Observations of multiple molecules provide– temperature– density– clump mass – kinematics: internal gas motions; rotation

• Clump self-gravity exceeds internal pressure

Page 18: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Star-Forming Molecular Cloud

30 Light Years

Ophiuchus Molecular Cloud (d ~ 500 light years)

Page 19: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Opaque Molecular Clump0.2 light years

Page 20: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Stellar Gestation

• Doppler analysis (mm-wave) of gas motions shows – clumps are collapsing– clumps are rotating

• Hubble Space Telescope observations reveal– flattened envelopes– opaque disks embedded within envelopes– central star

• Doppler analysis (infrared) of gas motions shows– gas accreting onto the central star

Page 21: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Disks and Envelopes Around Young Stars

Page 22: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Building a Mature Star

• Hubble space telescope observations reveal– disks of solar system dimension around young stars

• Infrared observations show– spectral signatures expected for accretion disks

• Radio observations: disk masses ~ solar system• Doppler analysis (infrared) of gas motions shows

– gas accreting onto the central star– winds emanating from star or inner disk

• Optical and infrared images reveal– jets emanating from star-disk systems

Page 23: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

HST Observes Protoplanetary Disks

Page 24: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

HST Observes Edge-on Disk

Page 25: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Diagnosing Disks in the Infrared

Page 26: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Accretion Disks and Stellar Jets

Page 27: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Implications for Planet Building

• In combination, these observations suggest:– accretion disks surround all forming stars– disk masses and sizes are similar to our solar system

• As a consequence of the processes that give birth to stars, raw material for planet-building is in place

Page 28: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Evidence for Planetesimal Building

• Earth-like planets believed built via planetesimal collisions– produce larger bodies – produce small dust grains as a by-product of collisions

• Planetesimals not observed directly• In solar system, evidence of collisions comes from

– cratering history (moon; other bodies)– inclination of planet rotation axes

• Outside solar system, evidence of collisions come from– light scattered earthward by small dust grains– thermal emission from heated grains

• Dust grain population decreases with age– similar to solar system record

Page 29: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

A Post-Planet-Building Disk

HST Observtions of an IRAS-discovered disk

Page 30: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Disk Warping: Evidence of Planets?

Page 31: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Evidence for Extrasolar Planets

• Reflex Doppler motions in parent stars– periodic signals indicative of orbital motions– velocity amplitudes + periods yield mass estimates

• More than 50 systems now known– many contain multiple planets– unexpected distribution of orbital distances

• unfavorable for survival of terrestrial planets

• Direct evidence of giant planet planet via eclipse– gas envelope inferred from light curve shape

Page 32: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Detecting Extrasolar Planets

Page 33: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Extrasolar Planetary Systems

Page 34: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Extrasolar Planet Transit

Page 35: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Key Questions & Paths to Answers

Page 36: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Current Key Questions: Planets

• When do planets form?– disk accretion phase?

– later, following accretion of disk gas?

• How diverse are planetary system architectures?– are close-in (r < 1 AU) Jupiter-mass planets favored?

– are planets in habitable zones common or rare?

• Can we observe extra-solar planets directly?– can we determine atmospheric structure and chemistry ?

– can we detect signatures of life ?

Page 37: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

When do Planets Form?

• Key observations:– probing accretion disks surrounding young stars and searching

for tidal gaps diagnostic of forming planets

– searching for gaps in beta-Pic-like disks around mature stars

– determining accurate ages for star-disk systems

• Key facilities– ALMA

– next generation O/IR telescopes

– SIRTF + current generation telescopes

Page 38: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Diagnosing Planet Formation: GSMT

AURA-NIO Point Design 30-m ground-based telescope Emission from tidal gaps

Page 39: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Diagnosing Planet Formation: ALMA

Star at 10pc

Page 40: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

SIRTF

SIRTF: Artist Conception

Page 41: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Locating Candidate Planetary Systems with SIRTF

Inflections in spectra can diagnose gaps in dust disks

Dust excess can diagnose planetesimal collision rates

Page 42: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Dust Emission from Planet-Forming Disks: Resolving Candidate Mature Systems

Gemini observation of Dust Ring Artist conception of system

Page 43: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

How Diverse are Planetary System Architectures?

• Key observations– Statistical studies of dust distributions – Precise measurements of reflex motions:

• continuation of current radial velocity programs

• precise proper motion measurements

• Key facilities– SIRTF– SIM (Space Interferometry Mission)

Page 44: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Finding Planets: Precise Position Measurements

Page 45: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Space Interferometry Mission

SIM can (1) detect earth-like planets around nearby stars (2) determine distribution of planetary architectures from statistical studies of large samples of stars

Page 46: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Observing Planets Directly

• Key observations– imaging and spectroscopy

• Key theoretical work– develop understanding of how to diagnose life from

spectroscopic signatures

• Key facilities– Devices designed to enable high contrast imaging; spectroscopy

• coronagraphs that block out light from central star– use on current (Gemini; Keck) and future (GSMT) ground-based telescopes

• infrared interferometers (ground: e.g. Keck; Large Binocular Telescope)• Terrestrial Planet Finder/Darwin (space)

Page 47: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Diagnosing Mature Planets

Spectra diagnose structure and chemistry of planetary atmospheres

Page 48: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Terrestrial Planet Finder

TPF will have the ability to image and take spectra of earth-like planets surrounding nearby stars

Page 49: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Current Key Questions: Stars

• How does the distribution of stellar masses depend on initial conditions?– chemical abundance?– collisions among molecular clouds?

• How has star formation activity changed over the lifetime of the universe?

Page 50: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

How Stars of Different Mass Form

• Key observations– physical conditions and kinematics in molecular clouds

– observations of stellar mass distributions in these clouds

• Key facilities– ALMA

• high spatial resolution maps of molecular clouds

– large ground-based telescopes (Gemini; Keck; GSMT)• photometry and spectroscopy of emerging stellar populations

Page 51: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Probing the IMF: Measurements

= 7”

Stellar density ~ 100x Orion Nebula Cluster

Galactic Center Superclusters: d = 10 kpc

Page 52: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Probing the IMF: Measurements

R 136

20”

Stellar density ~ 10x Orion Nebula Cluster

LMC Massive Cluster: d = 200 kpc

Page 53: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Probing the IMF: Measurements

M82 Superclusters: d = 4 Mpc

Page 54: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

Star Formation: From the First Stars to the Current Epoch

• Key observations– trace star formation rate to earliest epochs– study starburst systems

• star formation rates

• distribution of stellar masses

• Key facilities– NGST (multi-wavelength photometry)– large ground-based telescopes (spectroscopy)

Page 55: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

JWST will observe first generation stars

Page 56: THE BIRTH OF STARS AND PLANETARY SYSTEMS Stephen E. Strom National Optical Astronomy Observatory 07 January, 2003

GSMT will enable analyis of distant star-forming regions

HST

GSMT