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Encyclopedia > Interstellar matter

The interstellar medium (or ISM) is a term used in astronomy to describe the rarefied gas and dust that exists between the stars (or their immediate "circumstellar" environment) within a galaxy. The matter normally consists of about 99% gas particles and usually 1% of dust.


This compound is usually extremely tenuous, with typical densities ranging from a few single to a few hundreds of a particles per cubic centimeter. Generally the gas is roughly 90% hydrogen and 10% helium, with additional elements ("metals" in astronomical parlance) present in trace amounts.


The medium is also responsible for cosmic extinction, namely the decreasing light intensity of a star as the light travels through the medium. This extinction is caused by refraction and absorption of photons in certain wavelengths.


For example, a typical absorption wavelength of atomic hydrogen lies at ca. 121.5 nm, the Lyman-alpha transition. Therefore, it is nearly impossible to see light emitted at that wavelength from a star, because most of it is absorbed during the trip to Earth by Lyman-alpha absorption.


The interstellar medium is usually divided into three phases, depending on the temperature of the gas: hot (millions of kelvins), warm (thousands of kelvins), and cold (tens of kelvins). This "three-phase" model of the ISM was initially developed by McKee and Ostriker in a 1977 paper, which has formed the basis for further study over the past quarter-century. The relative proportions of the phases is still a matter of considerable contention in scientific circles.


Features prominent in the study of the interstellar medium include molecular clouds, interstellar clouds, supernova remnants, planetary nebulae, and similar diffuse structures.


See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
Highbeam Encyclopedia - Search Results for interstellar (623 words)
interstellar matter matter in a galaxy between the stars, known also as the interstellar medium.
Distribution of Interstellar Matter Compared to the size of an entire galaxy, stars are virtually points, so that the region occupied by the interstellar matter constitutes nearly all the physical volume of a galaxy.
It consists of a cloud of nonluminous interstellar matter resembling the outline of a horse's head and appears against the background of a bright emission nebula.
Astronomy Supplement - The Interstellar Medium (6671 words)
Interstellar matter is primarily a gas, in which hydrogen is the chief component.
Interstellar matter is not uniformly spread throughout the Galaxy but is clumped together in interstellar clouds that vary in size and the complexity of their association in our Galaxy.
The interstellar matter of our Galaxy, and presumably other galaxies, is a mixture of atomic and molecular gases, mostly hydrogen, along with small solid particles, called grains or dust, concentrated primarily in the plane of the Galaxy.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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