Hostname: page-component-7bb8b95d7b-nptnm Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-09-24T13:34:35.141Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Galactic and extragalactic hot bubbles: Feedback from massive stars

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 November 2011

T. Montmerle*
Affiliation:
Institut d’Astrophysique de Paris, 98bis, Bd. Arago, 75014 Paris, France
Get access

Abstract

We briefly review the feedback effects of massive stars, via their stellar winds and supernova explosions, on the star-forming regions in which they were born. We give a few examples, spanning a wide range of spatial scales, from ∼100 pc out to ∼10 kpc: the so-called “Local Bubble” (in reality an open bipolar structure extending on both sides of the galactic disk); the Extended Orion Nebula and its open cavity filled with a hot, MK outflowing plasma; the Great Carina Nebula and its extended diffuse X-ray emission; the 30 Dor region in the LMC and its various bubbles; and the extended, bipolar outflow of the prototype starburst galaxy M 82, influenced by a nearby group of galaxies. We conclude by stressing the similarity of these phenomena across all spatial scales, galactic and extragalactic.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© EAS, EDP Sciences, 2011

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Asplund, M., Grevesse, N., Sauval, A.J., & Scott, P., 2009, ARA&A, 47, 481CrossRef
Blaauw, A., 1991, in The Physics of Star Formation and Early Evolution, ed.Lada, C.J., & Kylafis, N. (Dordrecht, Kluwer),C342, 125CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crowther, P.A., et al., 2010, MNRAS, 408, 731CrossRef
Engelbracht, C.W., et al., 2006, ApJ, 642, L127CrossRef
Feigelson, E.D., et al., 2005, ApJS, 160, 379CrossRef
Fegelson, E.D., et al., 2011, ApJS, 194, AI9CrossRef
Güdel, M., Briggs, K.R., Montmerle, T., et al., 2008, Science, 319, 309CrossRef
Hamaguchi, K., et al., 2009, ApJ, 695, L4CrossRef
Lallement, R., Welsh, B.Y., Vergely, J.L., Crifo, F., & Sfeir, D., 2003, A&A, 411, 447
Lallement, R., 2004, A&A, 422, 391
Lallement, R., 2009, Sp. Sci. Rev., 143, 427CrossRef
Longair, M.S., 2001, High Energy Astrophysics, 3rd ed. (Cambridge University Press), 862Google Scholar
O’Dell, C.R., 2001, ARA&A, 39, 99CrossRef
Perrot, C., Grenier, I., 2003, A&A, 404, 519
Ranalli, P., Comastri, A., Origlia, L., & Maiolino, R., 2008, MNRAS, 386, 1464CrossRef
Reynolds, R.J., & Ogden, P.M., 1979, ApJ, 229, 942CrossRef
Roussel, H., et al., 2010, A&A, 518, L66
Smith, N., & Brooks, K.J., 2008, in Handbook of Star Forming Regions, Vol. II, Astronomical Society of the Pacific, ed. Reipurth, B.Google Scholar
Townsley, L.K., et al., 2006, AJ, 131, 2140CrossRef
Townsley, L.K., et al., 2011a, ApJS, 194, AI1CrossRef
Townsley, L.K., et al., 2011b, ApJS, 194, AI15CrossRef
Townsley, L.K., Broos, P.S., Chu, Y.-H., et al., 2011c, ApJS, 194, AI16CrossRef
Voss, R., et al., 2009, A&A, 504, 531
Vuong, M. H., Montmerle, T., Grosso, N., et al., 2003, A&A, 408, 581