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M82 in Context

Starburst Galaxies

XRAY OF M82
X-ray of M82
Credit: NASA/CXC/SAO/PSU/CMU

A starburst galaxy is a galaxy experiencing a period of intense star forming activity. Although this activity may last for ten million years or more, that is like a month in the life of a ten billion year old galaxy. During a starburst, stars can form at tens, even hundreds of times greater rates than the star formation rate in normal galaxies. Many of these newly formed stars are very massive and very bright, so starburst galaxies are among the most luminous galaxies.

The burst occurs over a region a few thousand light years in diameter. The most popular theory for the cause of a starburst is that it is triggered by a close encounter or collision with another galaxy. This collision sends shock waves rushing through the galaxy. These shock waves push on giant clouds of gas and dust, causing them to collapse and form a few hundred stars. The massive stars use up their fuel quickly and explode as supernovas, which produces more shock waves and more star formation. In this way, a chain reaction of star formation and supernovas can sweep through the central region of a galaxy, where most of the gas is located. When most of the gas is used up or blown away by the explosions, the starburst ends.


The infrared satellite IRAS discovered thousands of starburst galaxies. Many of the new stars remain surrounded by dust and gas for a million years. Their light is absorbed by the dust, which radiates away the heat as infrared radiation. The "heat radiation" produced by hot sidewalks on a summer day is infrared radiation. Starburst galaxies are rare among nearby galaxies, but they were common many billions of years ago. The universe is expanding, so galaxies were much closer together in the past and collisions or close encounters were more frequent, causing more starbursts.

Starburst Wind Illustration
Starburst-driven Galactic Winds
Credit: D.Strickland

X-ray observations play an important role in understanding starburst galaxies. The rapid rate of supernovas heats the gas in the galaxy to millions of degrees. An expanding bubble of hot gas extends beyond the galaxy in a starburst wind.

X-ray observations provide the best means for studying the formation and expansion of starburst winds. This information can be very important for understanding how much gas is blown out of a galaxy by a starburst wind. Since gas is the source of new stars, the starburst wind can have an important effect on the future evolution of the galaxy.

Starburst winds carry with them the carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, iron and other heavy elements blown out of stars in supernovas. They are probably the main way in which these elements are spread throughout the universe. With Chandra, astronomers hope to detect these elements in starburst winds and get a better idea of what the gas between galaxies is made of and where it came from.




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