In our modern world,
many people move far away from their birthplaces, sometimes halfway around the
world," said Michael Hayden, NMSU astronomy graduate student and lead
author of the new study. "Now we're finding the same is true of stars in
our galaxy -- about 30 percent of the stars in our galaxy have traveled a long
way from where they were born."
To build a new map of the
Milky Way, scientists used the SDSS Apache Point Observatory Galactic Evolution
Explorer (APOGEE) spectrograph to observe 100,000 stars during a 4-year period.
For the last six years,
NMSU astronomers in the College of Arts and Sciences, along with collaborators
from member institutions around the world, have been using the 2.5-meter SDSS
telescope at the Apache Point, located in the Sacramento Mountains about 20
miles south of Cloudcroft complete a suite of experiments that includes studies
of Milky Way stars to unlock the history of our galaxy.
The key to creating and
interpreting this map of the galaxy is measuring the elements in the atmosphere
of each star. "From the chemical composition of a star, we can learn its
ancestry and life history," said Hayden, who is completing his Ph.D. at
NMSU this summer.
The chemical information
comes from spectra, which are detailed measurements of how much light the star
gives off at different wavelengths. Spectra show prominent lines that
correspond to elements and compounds. Astronomers can tell what a star is made
of by reading these spectral lines.
"Stellar spectra show
us that the chemical makeup of our galaxy is constantly changing," said
Jon Holtzman, NMSU astronomy professor who was involved in the study.
"Stars create heavier elements in their cores, and when the stars die,
those heavier elements go back into the gas from which the next stars
form."
As a result of this process
of "chemical enrichment," each generation of stars has a higher
percentage of heavier elements than the previous generation did. In some
regions of the galaxy, star formation has proceeded more vigorously than in
other regions -- and in these more vigorous regions, more generations of new
stars have formed. This means the average amount of heavier elements in stars
varies among different parts of the galaxy. Astronomers then can determine what
part of the galaxy a star was born in by tracing the amount of heavy elements
in that star.
Hayden and his colleagues
used APOGEE data to map the relative amounts of 15 separate elements, including
carbon, silicon, and iron for stars all over the galaxy. What they found
surprised them -- up to 30 percent of stars had compositions indicating that
they were formed in parts of the galaxy far from their current positions.
When the team looked at the
pattern of element abundances in detail, they found that much of the data could
be explained by a model in which stars migrate radially, moving closer or
farther from the galactic center with time. These random in-and-out motions are
referred to as "migration," and are likely caused by irregularities
in the galactic disk, such as the Milky Way's famous spiral arms. Evidence of
stellar migration had previously been seen in stars near the Sun, but the new
study is the first clear evidence that migration occurs throughout the galaxy.
Future studies by
astronomers using data from SDSS promise even more new discoveries. "These latest results
take advantage of only a small fraction of the available APOGEE data,"
said Steven Majewski, the Principal Investigator of APOGEE. "Once we
unlock the full information content of APOGEE, we will understand the chemistry
and shape of our galaxy much more clearly."
NMSU has already begun
Phase IV of SDSS, the next six-year mission, which runs through 2020. It will
include data from the Sloan telescope at Apache Point Observatory and an
additional telescope in Chile, adding to the database with a better view of the
southern sky.
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