Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu...

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Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October 19, 2000

Transcript of Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu...

Page 1: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey

Shantanu Basu

U. Western Ontario

Michigan State University

October 19, 2000

Page 2: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

A Universe of Stars? A Universe of Hydrogen gas

Page 3: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

The Interstellar Medium

• The matter between the stars, mostly hydrogen gas

• A complex balance between the conversion of gas to stars and the feedback from stars, e.g., massive stars at the end of their life

• The ISM holds the key to understanding star formation

• The ISM plays a key role in understanding galaxy formation and evolution

• Details of ISM evolution best studied in our Galaxy

Page 4: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

The Evolution of Matter

The “ecosystem” of galaxies

Page 5: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

The Milky Way Galaxy is the only galaxy close enough to see the details of the Galactic “Ecosystem”.

Challenges• The Galactic plane encircles the Earth

– A large area of sky must be observed

• The Galaxy is a 3-dimensional object– Must untangle the third dimension

• High Angular resolution is need to see the details in the context of the larger picture– A very large data base

• A large range of wavelengths must be covered to see all major components of the ISM– Several telescopes will be required

Page 6: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

Milky Way in Optical Light (0.0005 mm)

Stars obscured by dust

Page 7: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

Milky Way in Far-infrared Light (0.0035 mm)

Old red stars with little obscuration

Page 8: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

Milky Way at Sub-millimetre (=0.240 mm )

Dust now seen as an emitter

Page 9: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

Milky Way at Radio (21 cm)

Atomic hydrogen gas (the basic stuff of the Universe)

Page 10: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

The Milky Way at Radio (74 cm)

Ionized gas and magnetic fields

Page 11: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

Objectives of the CGPS

Science Goals:

• How does the interstellar medium evolve?Explore the evolutionary relationship between the phases and states

of the interstellar medium. How do galaxies convert diffuse primordial hydrogen to stars and the building blocks of life?

• What energizes and shapes the medium?Characterize the energy sources and modes of energy transport

• Is the Milky Way a closed system?Explore the vertical structure out of the disk. Is there mass and

energy exchange between the disk and extragalactic space?

Observing Goals:

• Create a high-resolution (1arcminute), 3-dimensional map of the interstellar medium of the Milky Way. The first large-scale, spectral line, aperture synthesis survey ever made.

• Construct a Galactic Plane Survey Data base of the distribution of major constituents of the interstellar medium.

Page 12: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

The CGPS Data Base

All images at 1 arcminute resolution

Page 13: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

Where is the CGPS?

Survey covers Galactic longitudes l = 74.20 to 147.30 and latitude b = - 3.50 to +5.50

Page 14: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

The Dominion Radio Astrophysical Observatory

Page 15: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

Milky Way at Radio (21 cm)

Butler & Hartmann (1994), Leiden-Dwingeloo Survey, 35’ resolution

Page 16: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

Atomic Hydrogen Image from a Single Antenna Radio Telescope

25-m Radio Telescope, DwingelooNetherlands Foundation for Radio Astronomy

Page 17: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

Atomic Hydrogen Image from a Radio Interferometer

7-element Interferometer, PentictonDominion Radio Astrophysical Observatory

equivalent diameter equals 600m

Page 18: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

Slicing up the Milky Way Galaxy

Sun

Galactic Centre

Velocity changes systematically with distance along the line of sight.

Page 19: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

Atomic hydrogen data “cube”

256 channels,

velocity resolution

1.2 km/s.

Page 20: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

A top-down view of the hydrogen cube

The Perseus spiral arm

The Local spiral arm

Outer spiral arm

Page 21: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

A Close-up view of the Perseus Arm

Page 22: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

Optical Image Stars and Ionized gas (Thanks to Alan Dyer)

Radio 21cm image Neutral Hydrogen gas (Perseus Spiral Arm)

Page 23: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

Optical Image Stars and Ionized gas

Far-Infrared Image Dust Particles

Page 24: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

Optical Image Stars and Ionized gas

Radio 74 cm image Ionized Gas

Page 25: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

Optical Image Stars and Ionized gas

Composite Image Hydrogen Gas Dust Ionized Gas

Page 26: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

W4: A Chimney to the Galactic halo?

A “chimney” may be blown out by a cluster of massive hot stars at the bottom

Intense ultra-violet radiation “leaks” out of the galaxy

Page 27: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

W4 Superbubble

HI velocity channel map

Normandeau, Taylor, & Dewdney (1996, 1997); CGPS Pilot Project

H map

Dennison, Topasna, & Simonetti (1997); model overlay by Basu, Johnstone, & Martin (1999)

Page 28: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

Blowout from Galactic disk: Theory

MacLow & McCray (1988);MacLow, McCray, & Norman (1989)

Compare to expansion in a uniform medium:

r L t

1 2 5

1 5 4

1 5

01 5

01 5 3 5

/

/ / / .

Bubble can stall at radius

R L Psta ll e

2 7

1 5 4

1 2

01 2

01 4 3 4

// / / .

Therefore, bubble “blows out” if stalling parameter

bR

H s ta ll 1.

Page 29: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

Blowout from Galactic disk: TheoryKompaneets (1960) analytic solution for ambient atmosphere e - z/H. Pext=0.

Solid lines: shock front =>

r z y H e ez H y

Hz H( , ) ./ / 2 12

4

2

2arcco s 12

where y, between 0 and 2H, parameterizes the evolution of the bubble.

Dashed lines: streamlines

Can fit the observed aspect ratio of W4 (Basu, Johnstone, & Martin (1999):

z

r

y H

y Hy H

r H y H H y H

r d

H

11 2

23 3 3 2 1 9 8

2 2 2 8 9 2 1 9 8

7 4 2 3 5

2 5

m ax

m ax

m ax

. . .

. . ,

.

ln -

a rcsin

S in ce a rcsin fo r

an d w e o b serv e p c fo r k p c ,

p c .

More generally, r(z=0) ~2H in late stages. We observe r(z=0) ~ 50 pc

H 2 5 p c .

Page 30: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

Another H I shell: G132.6-0.7-25.3Normandeau, Taylor, Dewdney, & Basu (2000).

Apply aspect ratio argument using Kompaneets model and estimated distance (~2.2 kpc) to obtain

H 1 7 3. p c .

Note: relatively small H =>

superbubbles may have limited influence near Galactic plane.

Page 31: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

Classical picture of Galactic gas scale height

e.g., Spitzer (1978)

Hc

gc

g

eff2

eff-1

-2

w h ere 6 - 1 0 k m s

cm s

1

3 1 0 1 19

, ,

, , ,

= ratio of magnetic energy density to kinetic energy density of clouds,

= ratio of cosmic ray pressure to kinetic energy density.

H 1 0 0 2 0 0 p c

Consistent with large scale surveys of H I. But individual star-forming regions appear to be distinct.

Page 32: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

Ionization front in a stratified medium (W4)

Basu, Johnstone, & Martin (1999)

Initial ionization front around an H II region for RSt/H = 0.1, 0.3, 0.5, 0.7, 0.9, 1, 2, 3, and 4. Atmosphere = e - z/H. Breakout when RSt/H > 1.

Ionization front around a wind-swept shell in the same atmosphere for n = 1, 5, 10, 15, and 20 cm-3. Require n > 10 cm-3 to fit observations of W4.

Page 33: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

Evolution of Ionization FrontBasu, Johnstone, & Martin (1999) - emission measure through ionized region.

Ionizing photons initially escape atmosphere, then trapped by wind-swept shell, then break out of the top part of shell. Competition of n2 dependence of recombination rate vs. diverging streamlines.

Eventually, some 15% of ionizing photons escape through the top of shell. If this is typical of superbubbles, can it explain the Reynolds layer (scale height of free electrons ~ 1 kpc)?

Page 34: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

Age of W4 Superbubble

t c n H L

c

H n L

t

1 01 3 5 3

01 3

1

03

03 7 1

6 3

2 5 1 0 3 1 0

2 5

/ / / .

.

, ,

.

a t cu rren t ep o ch .

p c , cm erg s

M y r.

Age agrees with estimates for age of cluster OCl 352 at the base of the superbubble; consistent with bubble powered by stellar winds.

Dynamics of W4 Superbubble• Numerical hydrodynamic simulations predict lack of collimation at large height and Rayleigh-Taylor instability => not seen!

• Likely need to run MHD models for a more complete picture.

Page 35: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

Atomic Hydrogen Mushroom Cloud

Page 36: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

The Mushroom Cloud: GW123.4-1.5

Challenges to conventional superbubble models:

1) narrow stem width and large cap to stem width ratio

2) bulk of mass in cap

3) excess of H I emission, not a deficit

A jet, buoyant bubble, or something else?

English et al. (2000)

Page 37: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

The Mushroom Cloud: GW 123.4-1.5English et al. (2000) => a buoyant supernova remnant.

Illustrate the effect with Zeus-2D numerical simulations.

Look at case in which Rstall < H.

Page 38: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

What’s Next? A Global Galactic Plane Survey

Dominion Radio Astrophysical ObservatoryNational Research Council of Canada

Australia Telescope Compact Array Commonwealth Science and Industrial Research Organisation

Very Large ArrayU.S. National Radio Astronomy Observatory

Page 39: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

A Global Survey: CGPS, VGPS and SGPS

CGPS 1+2 :

6 5 1 8 00 0 l .

SGPS:

2 5 3 3 5 70 0 l .

VGPS:

1 8 6 7

1 8

0 0

0

l

l

p lan n ed

-5 p ro p o sed0

Page 40: Shells, Bubbles, Worms, and Chimneys: Highlights from the Canadian Galactic Plane Survey Shantanu Basu U. Western Ontario Michigan State University October.

ConclusionsOnly a small fraction of the Galaxy has so far been mapped in 1 arcminute resolution. Some of what has been learned:

• First close-up views of exotic phenomena (chimney, mushroom) related to the disk-halo interaction (matter and radiation transport) in our Galaxy

• First comparison of observed superbubble(s) with theoretical models. Evidence for highly stratified ISM near star-forming regions => superbubbles have limited influence near Galactic Plane; significant fraction of ionizing photons can escape to high latitudes

• Widespread complex polarization patterns - a tracer of magnetic field and ionized medium

In the future, expanded CGPS + VGPS + SGPS will:

• Observe nearly full Galactic longitude range at 1 arcminute resolution

• Focus on individual disk-halo interaction candidates to higher latitude

• Explore star formation by focusing on atomic gas around molecular clouds