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| An artist's impression of the Milky Way that shows how it might appear from a planet orbiting a star in one of the newly discovered clusters [Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/ESO/R. Hurt] |
Stars form inside massive and dense clumps of gas in so-called giant molecular clouds (GMCs) that are mainly located in the inner part of the galactic disc. With many clumps in a single GMC, most (if not all) stars are born together in clusters.
Denilso’s team looked at data from NASA’s orbiting Wide-Field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) observatory. They not only found GMCs thousands of light years above and below the galactic disc, but that one of them unexpectedly contained two clusters of stars. This is the first time astronomers have found stars being born in such a remote location.
Denilso believes there are two possible explanations. In the first case, the 'chimney model', violent events such as supernova explosions eject dust and gas out of the galactic disk. The material then falls back, in the process merging to form GMCs.
The other idea is that the interaction between our Galaxy and its satellites, the Magellanic Clouds, may have disturbed gas that falls into the Galaxy, again leading to the creation of GMCs and stars.
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| A negative WISE W3 image of dust emission centred on Camargo 438. Some of the stars in these clusters may be hidden by dust [Credit: D. Camargo/NASA/WISE] |
"Now we want to understand how the ingredients for making stars made it to such a distant spot. We need more data and some serious work on computer models to try to answer this question."
The chimney model would need several hundred massive stars to have exploded as supernovae over several generations, creating a 'superwind' that threw HRK 81.4-77.8 into its present position. Over millions of years, the bubbles created by the explosions may then themselves compress material, forming more stars and fuelling the ejection of material in a 'galactic fountain', where the dust and gas eventually rains back on to the disk.
Source: Royal Astronomical Society [February 27, 2015]








