Starbursts in Dwarf Galaxies Are a Global Affair
04.30.09
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Release No. STScI-PR09-19
Credit: NASA, ESA, and K. McQuinn (University of Minnesota, Minneapolis)
Bursts of star making in a galaxy have been compared to a Fourth of July fireworks display:
They occur at a fast and furious pace, lighting up a region for a short time before winking
out.
But these fleeting starbursts are only pieces of the story, astronomers say. An analysis of
archival images of small, or dwarf, galaxies taken by NASA's Hubble Space Telescope
suggests that starbursts, intense regions of star formation, sweep across the whole galaxy
and last 100 times longer than astronomers thought. The longer duration may affect how
dwarf galaxies change over time, and therefore may shed light on galaxy evolution.
"Our analysis shows that starburst activity in a dwarf galaxy happens on a global scale,"
explains Kristen McQuinn of the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis and leader of the
study. "There are pockets of intense star formation that propagate throughout the galaxy,
like a string of firecrackers going off. The duration of all the starburst events in a single dwarf
galaxy would total 200 million to 400 million years."
These longer timescales are vastly more than the 5 million to 10 million years proposed by
astronomers who have studied star formation in dwarf galaxies. "They were only looking at
individual clusters and not the whole galaxy, so they assumed starbursts in galaxies lasted
for a short time," McQuinn says.
Dwarf galaxies are considered by many astronomers to be the building blocks of the large
galaxies seen today, so the length of starbursts is important for understanding how galaxies
evolve.
"Astronomers are really interested to find out the steps of galaxy evolution," McQuinn says.
"Exploring these smaller galaxies is important because, according to popular theory, large
galaxies are created from the merger of smaller, dwarf galaxies. So understanding these
smaller pieces is an important part of filling in that scenario."
McQuinn's team analyzed archival Advanced Camera for Surveys data of three dwarf
galaxies, NGC 4163, NGC 4068, and IC 4662. Their distances range from 8 million to 14
million light-years away. The trio is part of a survey of starbursts in 18 nearby dwarf galaxies.
Hubble's superb resolution allowed McQuinn's team to pick out individual stars in the
galaxies and measure their brightness and color, two important characteristics astronomers
use to determine stellar ages. By determining the ages of the stars, the astronomers could
reconstruct the starburst history in each galaxy.
Two of the galaxies, NGC 4068 and IC 4662, show active, brilliant starburst regions in the
Hubble images. The most recent starburst in the third galaxy, NGC 4163, occurred 200
million years ago and has faded from view.
The team looked at regions of high and low densities of stars, piecing together a picture of
the starbursts. The galaxies were making a few stars, when something, perhaps an
encounter with another galaxy, pushed them into high star-making mode. Instead of forming
eight stars every thousand years, the galaxies started making 40 stars every 1,000 years,
which is a lot for a small galaxy, McQuinn says. The typical dwarf is 10,000 to 30,000
light-years wide. By comparison, a normal-sized galaxy such as our Milky Way is about
100,000 light-years wide.
About 300 million to 400 million years ago star formation occurred in the outer areas of the
galaxies. Then it began migrating inward as explosions of massive stars triggered new star
formation in adjoining regions. Starbursts are still occurring in the inner parts of NGC 4068
and IC 4662.
The total duration of starburst activity depends on many factors, including the amount of
gas in a galaxy, the distribution and density of the gas, and the event that triggered the
starburst. A merger or an interaction with a large galaxy, for example, could create a longer
starburst event than an interaction with a smaller system.
McQuinn plans to expand her study to a larger sample of more than 20 galaxies. Studying
nearby dwarf galaxies, where we can see the stars in great detail, will help us interpret
observations of galaxies in the distant universe, where starbursts were much more common
because galaxies had more gas with which to make stars," McQuinn explains.
McQuinn's results appeared in the April 10 issue of The Astrophysical Journal.
The Hubble Space Telescope is a project of international cooperation between NASA and
the European Space Agency (ESA) and is managed by NASA's Goddard Space Flight
Center (GSFC) in Greenbelt, Md. The Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) conducts
Hubble science operations. The institute is operated for NASA by the Association of
Universities for Research in Astronomy, Inc., Washington, D.C.
STScI is an International Year of Astronomy 2009 (IYA 2009) program partner.