The nature of peculiar stellar complexes |
| |
Authors: | Yu. N. Efremov |
| |
Affiliation: | (1) Sternberg Astronomical Institute, Universitetskii pr. 13, Moscow, 119899, Russia |
| |
Abstract: | The nature of stellar complexes with peculiar populations and morphologies is investigated. The existence in the LMC of complexes made up of isolated stars, on the one hand, and consisting exclusively of clusters, on the other hand, could be due to different turbulence patterns in the initial gaseous medium. Arc-shaped stellar complexes are unlikely to be the result of star formation in a gaseous shell swept up by a central source of pressure, and instead probably reflect the shape of a bow shock that develops when a sufficiently dense cloud is subject to dynamical pressure. A peculiar arc-shaped complex in NGC 6946, which contains a young, massive cluster, may be the result of an oblique infall of a high-velocity cloud onto a region of the gaseous disk of the Galaxy with a strong, regular magnetic field; the properties of this complex can be explained as the result of a collision of the resulting shocks. The arc-shaped complexes in the LMC were also probably produced by high-velocity clouds moving obliquely through the more tenuous gas of the LMC disk. A similar complex in NGC 300 may owe its origin to the effect produced on a dense cloud by the shock from an extremely powerful external explosion, whose stellar remnant may have survived as an X-ray source now located along the line of symmetry of the arc of the complex. The rareness of such structures can be explained by the narrow range of conditions under which they can develop. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 SpringerLink 等数据库收录! |
|