Evidence for Planet-forming Discs Living Longer in Early Universe | Webb
This is a NASA/European Space Agency/Canadian Space Agency James Webb Space Telescope image of NGC 346, a massive star cluster in the Small Magellanic Cloud, a dwarf galaxy that is one of the Milky Way’s nearest neighbors. With its relative lack of elements heavier than helium and hydrogen, the NGC 346 cluster serves as a nearby proxy for studying stellar environments with similar conditions in the early, distant Universe. Ten, small, yellow circles overlaid on the image indicate the positions of the ten stars surveyed in this study.
This image features NGC 346, one of the most dynamic star-forming regions in nearby galaxies, as seen by the NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope.
This graph shows, on the bottom left in yellow, a spectrum of one of the 10 target stars in this study (as well as accompanying light from the immediate background environment). Spectral fingerprints of hot atomic helium, cold molecular hydrogen, and hot atomic hydrogen are highlighted. On the top left in magenta is a spectrum slightly offset from the star that includes only light from the background environment. This second spectrum lacks a spectral line of cold molecular hydrogen.
On the right is the comparison of the top and bottom lines. This comparison shows a large peak in the cold molecular hydrogen coming from the star but not its nebular environment. Also, atomic hydrogen shows a larger peak from the star. This indicates the presence of a protoplanetary disc immediately surrounding the star. The data was taken with the microshutter array on the James Webb Space Telescope’s Near-Infrared Spectrometer (NIRSpec) instrument.
NASA/European Space Agency/Canadian Space Agency James Webb Space Telescope finds planet-forming discs lived longer in early Universe. New data refutes current theories of planet formation in Universe’s early days. Webb just solved a conundrum by proving a controversial finding made with the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope more than 20 years ago. In 2003, Hubble provided evidence of a massive planet around a very old star, almost as old as the Universe. Such stars possess only small amounts of heavier elements that are the building blocks of planets. This implied that some planet formation happened when our Universe was very young, and those planets had time to form and grow big inside their primordial discs, even bigger than Jupiter. But how? This was puzzling.
To answer this question, researchers used Webb to study stars in a nearby galaxy that, much like the early Universe, lacks large amounts of heavy elements. They found that not only do stars there have planet-forming discs, but that those discs are longer-lived than those seen around young stars in our Milky Way galaxy.
“With Webb, we have a really strong confirmation of what we saw with Hubble, and we must rethink how we model planet formation and early evolution in the young Universe,” said study leader Guido De Marchi of ESA's European Space Research and Technology Centre in Noordwijk, Netherlands.
A Different Environment in Early Times
In the early Universe, stars formed from mostly hydrogen and helium, and very few heavier elements, such as carbon and iron. These came later through supernova explosions.
“Current models predict that with so few heavier elements, the discs around stars have a short lifetime, so short in fact that planets cannot grow big,” said the Webb study’s co-investigator Elena Sabbi, chief scientist for Gemini Observatory at the National Science Foundation’s NOIRLab in Tucson. “But Hubble did see those planets, so what if the models were not correct and discs could live longer?”
To test this idea, scientists trained Webb on the Small Magellanic Cloud, a dwarf galaxy that is one of the Milky Way’s nearest neighbors. In particular, they examined the massive, star-forming cluster NGC 346. It also has a relative lack of heavier elements. The cluster served as a nearby proxy for studying stellar environments with similar conditions in the early, distant Universe.
Hubble observations of NGC 346 from the mid 2000s revealed many stars about 20 to 30 million years old that seemed to still have planet-forming discs around them. This went against the conventional belief that such discs would dissipate after 2 or 3 million years.
“The Hubble findings were controversial, going against not only empirical evidence in our galaxy but also against the current models,” said De Marchi. “This was intriguing, but without a way to obtain spectra of those stars, we could not really establish whether we were witnessing genuine accretion and the presence of discs, or just some artificial effects.”
Now, thanks to Webb’s sensitivity and resolution, scientists have the first-ever spectra of forming, Sun-like stars and their immediate environments in a nearby galaxy.
“We see that these stars are indeed surrounded by discs and are still in the process of gobbling material, even at the relatively old age of 20 or 30 million years,” said De Marchi. “This also implies that planets have more time to form and grow around these stars than in nearby star-forming regions in our own galaxy.”
A New Way of Thinking
This finding refutes previous theoretical predictions that when there are very few heavier elements in the gas around the disc, the star would very quickly blow away the disc. So the disc’s life would be very short, even less than a million years. However, if a disc does not stay around the star long enough for the dust grains to stick together and pebbles to form and become the core of a planet, how can planets form?
The researchers explained that there could be two distinct mechanisms, or even a combination, for planet-forming discs to persist in environments scarce in heavier elements.
First, to be able to blow away the disc, the star applies radiation pressure. For this pressure to be effective, elements heavier than hydrogen and helium would have to reside in the gas. The massive star cluster NGC 346 only has about ten percent of the heavier elements that are present in the chemical composition of our Sun. Perhaps it simply takes longer for a star in this cluster to disperse its disc.
The second possibility is that, for a Sun-like star to form when there are few heavier elements, it would have to start from a larger cloud of gas. A larger gas cloud will produce a bigger disc. Thus, there is more mass in the disc and therefore it would take longer to blow the disc away, even if the radiation pressure were working in the same way.
“With more matter around the stars, the accretion lasts for a longer time,” said Sabbi. "The discs take ten times longer to disappear. This has implications for how you form a planet, and the type of system architecture that you can have in these different environments. This is so exciting.”
The science team’s paper appears in the December 16, 2024 issue of The Astrophysical Journal.
Credit: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, A. Pagan (STScI)
Release Date: Jan. 11, 2023
#NASA #Astronomy #Space #Science #Webb #StarClusters #StarCluster #NGC346 #Tucana #Constellation #SmallMagellanicCloud #SMC #Galaxy #Cosmos #Universe #UnfoldTheUniverse #NASAWebb #JWST #NIRSpec #Infrared #SpaceTelescopes #ESA #Europe #CSA #Canada #GSFC #STScI #UnitedStates #Infographic #STEM #Education