Spherical episodic ejection of material from a young star
Author
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Torrelles, J. M.
Author
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Patel, N. A.
es_CL
Author
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Gómez, J. F.
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Author
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Ho, P. T. P.
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Author
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Rodríguez, L. F.
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Author
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Anglada Escudé, Guillem
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Author
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Garay Brignardello, Guido
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Author
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Greenhill, L.
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Author
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Curiel, S.
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Author
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Cantó, J.
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Admission date
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2014-01-10T13:49:23Z
Available date
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2014-01-10T13:49:23Z
Publication date
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2001-05-17
Cita de ítem
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Nature. 411. Pp. 277-280. 7 May 2001
en_US
Identifier
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DOI: 10.1038/35077020
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/126169
General note
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Artículo de publicación ISI
en_US
Abstract
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The exact processes by which interstellar matter condenses to
formyoung stars are of great interest, in part because they bear on
the formation of planets like our own from the material that fails
to become part of the star. Theoretical models suggest that
ejection of gas during early phases of stellar evolution is a key
mechanism for removing excess angular momentum, thereby
allowing material to drift inwards towards the star through an
accretion disk1,2. Such ejections also limit the mass that can be
accumulated by the stellar core1,2. To date, these ejections have
been observed to be bipolar and highly collimated, in agreement
with theory. Here we report observations at very high angular
resolution of the proper motions of an arc of water-vapour masers
near a very young, massive star in Cepheus.We ®nd that the arc of
masers can be ®tted to a circle with an accuracy of one part in a
thousand, and that the structure is expanding. Only a sphere will
always produce a circle in projection, so our observations strongly
suggest that the perfectly spherical ejection of material from this
star took place about 33 years earlier. The spherical symmetry of
the ejecta and its episodic nature are very surprising in the light of
present theories.