by Ann » Wed May 16, 2012 6:07 pm
Chris Peterson wrote:growlands wrote:Curious about the term "most violent" when describing an astronomical area. Sounds like something from the History Channel.
I would think that there might be star forming regions near a black hole, which might qualify as "even greater most violent".
It is the most violent
known star forming region.
I don't think there are any star forming regions associated with black holes. An ordinary stellar mass black hole isn't particularly violent, and would have little impact on its surrounds. Supermassive black holes, if anything, probably prevent star forming regions from developing anywhere near them.
But there are certainly galaxies which show a lot of star formation near their centers. Apart from NGC 4314, seen in a Hubble image here, see
Adam Block's image of M100, or check out
this page devoted to pictures of galaxy NGC 1097, which has a bright central starburst.
My impression is that black holes of a certain mass may possibly enhance a central starburst. But you are certainly correct, Chris, that a supermassive black hole will quench star formation.
Ann
[quote="Chris Peterson"][quote="growlands"]Curious about the term "most violent" when describing an astronomical area. Sounds like something from the History Channel.
I would think that there might be star forming regions near a black hole, which might qualify as "even greater most violent".[/quote]
It is the most violent [i]known[/i] star forming region.
I don't think there are any star forming regions associated with black holes. An ordinary stellar mass black hole isn't particularly violent, and would have little impact on its surrounds. Supermassive black holes, if anything, probably prevent star forming regions from developing anywhere near them.[/quote]
[float=left][img2]http://www.wormhole7.com/starburst.jpg[/img2][/float] But there are certainly galaxies which show a lot of star formation near their centers. Apart from NGC 4314, seen in a Hubble image here, see [url=http://www.caelumobservatory.com/mlsc/m100.jpg]Adam Block's image of M100[/url], or check out [url=http://lpb.fieldofscience.com/2009/07/spitzer-space-telescope-images-galaxy.html]this page devoted to pictures of galaxy NGC 1097[/url], which has a bright central starburst.
My impression is that black holes of a certain mass may possibly enhance a central starburst. But you are certainly correct, Chris, that a supermassive black hole will quench star formation.
Ann