Jet-induced star formation by a microquasar
I. F. Mirabel, S. Chaty, L.F. Rodriguez, M. Sauvage

TL;DR
This paper presents observational evidence that relativistic jets from the microquasar GRS 1915+105 can trigger massive star formation at distances of a few tens of parsecs, providing insights into jet-induced star formation processes.
Contribution
It demonstrates, through multiwavelength observations, that microquasar jets can induce star formation, a phenomenon previously observed mainly in AGN, and suggests relevance to cosmic re-ionization epochs.
Findings
Jets from GRS 1915+105 align with star forming IRAS sources.
Distance measurements confirm physical association between jets and star formation.
Microquasar jets can trigger massive star formation within tens of parsecs.
Abstract
Theoretical and observational work show that jets from AGN can trigger star formation. However, in the Milky Way the first -and so far- only clear case of relativistic jets inducing star formation has been found in the surroundings of the microquasar GRS 1915+105. Here we summarize the multiwavelength observations of two compact star formation IRAS sources axisymmetrically located and aligned with the position angle of the sub-arcsec relativistic jets from the stellar black hole binary GRS 1915+105 (Mirabel & Rodriguez 1994). The observations of these two star forming regions at centimeter (Rodriguez & Mirabel 1998), millimeter and infrared (Chaty et al. 2001) wavelengths had suggested -despite the large uncertainties in the distances a decade ago- that the jets from GRS 1915+105 are triggering along the radio jet axis the formation of massive stars in a radio lobe of bow shock…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
