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Magnetic waves are main force in star formation, researchers say by Allen Cone Washington (UPI) Sep 13, 2018 Magnetic waves are the main force in star formation in space, according to new research. This birth process leads to the formation of planets orbiting the sun and, ultimately, life on those planets, according Stella Offner, an assistant professor of astronomy at the University of Texas Austin. The new findings, which included using a supercomputer for models of the multitude of processes happening inside a cloud where stars are forming, was published this week in the journal Nature Astronomy. "These clouds are violent places," Stella Offner, assistant professor of astronomy, said in a press release. "It's an extreme environment with all kinds of different physics happening at once." This includes gravity and turbulence as well as radiation and winds from forming stars, which are called stellar feedback. Offner wanted to know: "Why are the motions in these clouds so violent?" The answer, according to some astronomers, are observed motions to gravitational collapse, or possibly turbulence and stellar feedback. Offner said it's virtually impossible to use telescopes to observe these clouds to find the influence of the various processes, she said. "That's why we need computer models," Offner said. Using the computer models, she noticed extra motions when comparing clouds with gravity, magnetic fields and stars. Stellar winds interacting with the cloud magnetic field generated energy and influenced gas at great distances across the cloud more than previously thought. "Think of the magnetic fields like rubber bands that stretch across the cloud," Offner said. "The winds push the field -- it's like rubber bands being plucked. The waves outrun the wind and cause distant motions." This study focused on one area within star-forming clouds but Offner said she plans to study this process on larger scales in time and space.
Telescope maps cosmic rays in large and small magellanic clouds perth, Australia (SPX) Sep 10, 2018 A radio telescope in outback Western Australia has been used to observe radiation from cosmic rays in two neighbouring galaxies, showing areas of star formation and echoes of past supernovae. The Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) telescope was able to map the Large Magellanic Cloud and Small Magellanic Cloud galaxies in unprecedented detail as they orbit around the Milky Way. By observing the sky at very low frequencies, astronomers detected cosmic rays and hot gas in the two galaxies and iden ... read more
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