| January 20, 1998 Media Contact: Mario Aguilera, University
Communications, (619) 534-7572, maguilera@ucsd.edu
NEST OF MASSIVE SUPERNOVAE FOUND
IN "STARBURST GALAXY"
A team of astronomers probing the
activities of a pair of colliding galaxies has been startled to discover that the merger
has resulted in a nest of a dozen or more extremely powerful supernova explosions,
comparable to the most powerful ever observed.
Analysis of images captured by a network
of 17 radio telescopes scattered in Europe and the United States suggest that about two of
these massive stars are exploding each year in the merging galaxy, known as Arp 220. By
comparison, our own Milky Way generates only about one supernova every century.
The study further indicates that each of
the Arp 220 supernovae triggers hundreds of times more radio wave energy than a
"typical" supernova. To put this in perspective, supernovae normally produce
more energy in one explosion than our sun will generate in its entire lifetime and glows
with such intensity that it outshines an entire galaxy of hundreds of billions of stars.
The results, published in the January 20
issue of the Astrophysical Journal Letters, surprised the astronomers who
previously suggested that such fury was likely unleashed by an enormously bright
quasarconsidered the ultimate fireworks display in the universe.
Instead, the new images suggest that Arp
220, located about 250 million light years from Earth, is a "starburst galaxy"
whose tremendous energy and giant supernovae explosions are powered by the rapid spawning
of very hot, fast-burning stars.
"I would say that within the
group of people working on star formation and infrared emission of galaxies, this is a
startling result," said Harding Smith, a professor of physics in the Center for
Astrophysics and Space Sciences at the University of California, San Diego. "I know I
was stunned."
Other members of the astronomer team
included Colin Lonsdale of the Massachusetts Institute of Technologys Haystack
Observatory, Carol Lonsdale of Caltechs Infrared Processing and Analysis Center, and
Philip Diamond of the National Radio Astronomy Observatory. A sort of family project,
Carol Lonsdale is Smiths wife and Colin Lonsdales sister.
The tremendous energy released when
galaxies collide has been the subject of intense debate among astronomers for about a
decade since these so-called "ultraluminous infrared galaxies" were first
discovered during NASAs Infrared Astronomical Satellite mission.
On one side of the debate are those who
believe that colliding galaxies might awaken a massive black hole lurking in the galactic
core. Once activated, huge quantities of gas and dust stirred up by the collision would
start falling into the center, feeding the black hole and allowing it to grow and shine
with the power of a billion suns. Thus, a quasar is born.
The competing theory suggests that these
ultra-radiant galaxies are illuminated by young, hot stars and powerful supernovae that
are born from shockwaves moving through large masses of gas in colliding galaxies.
Arp 220, the 220th object in
Halton Arps Atlas of Peculiar Galaxies, is considered a prototype ultraluminous
colliding galaxy whose "double nucleus" of two bright compact star clusters
represents the remnant cores of spiral galaxies before they collided, probably several
hundred million years ago. In the aftermath of the collision, huge clouds of dust and gas
were kicked up, effectively obscuring the twin nuclei from optical telescopes even as
powerful as the Hubble Space Telescope.
To cut through these dense clouds, the
astronomers tuned into radio waves capable of passing through the thick dust without
obstruction. By using radio telescopes that span the globe and a technique known as Very
Long Baseline Interferometry (VLBI), the researchers were allowed to peer into the heart
of Arp 220. To translate the resulting information, signals from the 17 radio telescopes
in the observational net were combined using special equipment at Haystack Observatory to
create startling new images.
Among other things, the images reveal
about a dozen extremely powerful supernovae exploding in the vicinity of one of the
nuclei, located in the northeast sector of Arp 220; only two relatively faint supernovae
were seen in the southeast nucleus.
Combined, the radio emission produced by
the supernovae and their associated starburst account for all the radio emissions
associated with the galaxy, the astronomers said, suggesting that a quasar isnt
needed.
"Its proof positive that you
can produce these kinds of energies through star formation," said Smith. "These
findings are consistent with the starburst model, with the inference that one
of the nuclei is far more active for star formation than the other."
Though the results represent a victory
for those supporting the "starburst" model over the quasar theory, Smith and his
co-authors acknowledge that similar studies of other ultraluminous infrared galaxies have
revealed huge quasars at their cores.
Smith wonders if these seemingly
contradictory results mean the existence of two separate classes of intensely lit
galaxies, or if there might be some evolutionary relationship between the two.
"If there is an evolutionary
relationship, then Arp 220 could be in its very early stages, where these two galaxies
have collided and star formation is going on very actively, but the quasar has not really
had a chance to turn on," he said. "So we still wonder if there isnt, at
some very low level, a nascent quasar at the center of Arp 220."
Future observations will
follow the life cycles of the dozen or so supernovae in Arp 220 to see if, as predicted,
they grow fainter with time. Theoretically, these studies should also reveal new massive
stellar explosions in the galaxy. The team also expects a new infrared camera and
spectrometer developed at UCSD for the Keck telescope will assist in future observations
of Arp 220 and other similar colliding galaxies.
AN IMAGE OF ARP 220 CAN BE DOWNLOADED
FROM THE FOLLOWING WEBSITE ADDRESS: http://oposite.stsci.edu/pubinfo/PR/97/17.html.
CAPTION: An image of Arp 220, taken with
the Hubble Space Telescopes new infrared camera shows the stars, gas and dust in Arp
200s central region. Even at this infrared wavelength, which penetrates dust better
than other wavelengths, the very central regions of Arp 220 are hidden from view. The
supernovae are mostly located within a 200 light year-size region coincident with the
western nucleus, seen here as the bright crescent-shaped object on the right. |