Forum for Science, Industry and Business
  • Sponsored by:
  • Siemens
  • Siemens
  • Siemens
Search our Site:

Topic (optional):

 

Home Reports Physics and Astronomy Content

Where is the gas in interstellar space?

next article
17.04.2007

A team of astronomers led by Professor Martin Barstow of the University of Leicester have searched for the hot gas thought to be present in the interstellar space around the Sun but found it just isn’t there.

 

Speaking at the Royal Astronomical Society National Astronomy Meeting in Preston on Tuesday 17 April, Professor Barstow will present a map of the local interstellar medium, the gas lying between the stars out to distances of about 300 light years from the Sun, made using the Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer (FUSE) satellite.


Professor Barstow and his team used FUSE to observe a group of white dwarf stars (compact remnants of stars like our Sun will be at the end of its life). The scientists intended to probe the structure of interstellar space in the vicinity of the Sun by searching for the imprint of oxygen in the ultraviolet light from the stars. However, all the oxygen detected was found to be in the atmospheres of the stars and no interstellar oxygen was found. This implies that, rather than being full of tenuous ionized gas, as expected, this region of interstellar space (the Local Cavity) is actually empty and was probably swept clear by an ancient supernova explosion a few million years ago.

Our present picture of the local interstellar medium is that the Sun and Solar system are embedded in and near the edge of a wispy diffuse cloud, known as the Local Cloud (or Local Fluff). This cloud, which is only 20-30 light years across, is itself in a larger much less dense region called the Local Bubble or Local Cavity.

The gas in the Local Cavity was expected to bear the scars of recent nearby events, such as supernova explosions, and radiation from hot young stars. These would make the cavity gas hot and ionized, with the electrons stripped from the constituent atoms, and should be detected by FUSE. The hot gas should emit also X-rays that are detected as a diffuse background in X-ray telescopes. However, if there is no hot gas present, then we need to find another explanation for this X-ray background. One novel suggestion is that it arises from the exchange of charged particles at the boundary between the Sun’s magnetic field and interstellar space.

Robert Massey | Source: alphagalileo
Further information: www.ras.org.uk
www.nam2007.uclan.ac.uk/press.php

next article

More articles from Physics and Astronomy:

nachricht Fermilab physicists discover "doubly strange" particle
05.09.2008 | DOE/Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory

nachricht Closest Look Ever at the Edge of a Black Hole
05.09.2008 | Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics

B2B Search

Product / Service
Company / Organisation

Latest News

Theory of the sun's role in formation of the solar system questioned

05.09.2008 | Earth Sciences

Caught in a trap: bumblebees vs. robotic crab spiders

05.09.2008 | Life Sciences

Do 68 molecules hold the key to understanding disease?

05.09.2008 | Life Sciences