免费看黄色大片-久久精品毛片-欧美日韩亚洲视频-日韩电影二区-天天射夜夜-色屁屁ts人妖系列二区-欧美色图12p-美女被c出水-日韩的一区二区-美女高潮流白浆视频-日韩精品一区二区久久-全部免费毛片在线播放网站-99精品国产在热久久婷婷-午夜精品理论片-亚洲人成网在线播放

Chinese astronomers to search for cradles of new suns with FAST

Source: Xinhua| 2019-06-23 19:10:01|Editor: Liangyu
Video PlayerClose

BEIJING, June 23 (Xinhua) -- How many new suns could emerge in the Milky Way in the future?

Chinese astronomers plan to use the Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical Radio Telescope (FAST), by far the largest telescope ever built, to search for birthplaces of new suns so they can better understand how stars and life substances are formed.

Astronomers at the National Astronomical Observatories of the Chinese Academy of Sciences recently caught the birth of a dark molecular cloud for the first time by using three telescopes of the United States and Europe. The discovery was published in the Astrophysical Journal, and introduced by the journal Nature as a research highlight.

Li Di, chief scientist of FAST, said hydrogen, the most abundant element in the universe and the main raw material for star formation, exists mainly in the form of atoms in the universe.

Only after the hydrogen atoms turn into hydrogen molecules, can gravitational collapse and nuclear fusion reactions be triggered, thus lighting up new stars, Li explained.

"The key step of turning hydrogen atoms into hydrogen molecules happens on the surface of cosmic dust," said Li.

Scientists found dark regions in the universe that are rich in atomic and molecular gases and cosmic dust, known as interstellar dark clouds, which are the birthplaces of new stars, new planets, and possibly life.

However, the interstellar dark clouds have the lowest temperature in the Milky Way, about minus 263 degrees Celsius. It is difficult to identify hydrogen atoms and molecules in the dark clouds at this low temperature.

Chinese astronomers developed a new observation method, called HI Narrow Self-Absorption. By using this method and the radio telescopes at the Arecibo Observatory and the Five College Radio Astronomical Observatory in the United States, as well as the European Hershel Space Observatory, the Chinese research team discovered dark cloud B227, which has an outer "shell" of atomic hydrogen, but a core dominated by molecular hydrogen.

"Our analysis showed the dark cloud is about 6 million years old; it's still a baby. A new sun will be born inside that cloud," said Li.

"Tens of thousands of interstellar dark clouds have been found previously, but this was the first time we got a look at a molecular cloud when it's born," Li said.

The discovery made Li very confident of finding the birthplaces of new suns with FAST in the future.

"The high sensitivity of FAST and its advantage in sky coverage will enable us to study the molecular clouds in the Milky Way, as well as in the Andromeda Galaxy, adjacent to our galaxy," Li said.

"We also plan to cooperate with the Milky Way Image Scroll Project of the Purple Mountain Observatory to catch the dark clouds at birth, and to study how many new suns will be born in our galaxy," said Li.

TOP STORIES
EDITOR’S CHOICE
MOST VIEWED
EXPLORE XINHUANET
010020070750000000000000011100001381668221