News on Galaxies
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- Overfed black holes shut down galactic star-making
- The eye of the storm in a galaxy-cluster
- A galaxy that is both slim and round
- The Milkyway have a strange structure associated with it
- Hundreds of Blazars
- Colliding galaxy-clusters
- 'Time machine' will study the early universe
- The heart of a cosmic collision
- Starbursts in early galaxies not caused by mergers
- The Sun align with the Orion galaxy-arm
- Discovery of an unusaul rectangular galaxy
- 200.000 galaxies in just ONE image
- The most excotic known galaxy
- Spider web of star formations in distant galaxy
- Series of quasars acting as gravitational lenses
- Mapping of dark matter around a galaxy-cluster
- Intergalactic recycling
- Discovery of a change in galaxies growth
- Galaxies el'Dorado
- The dans of galaxies in the Hercules galaxy-cluster
- Discovery of hidden very early galaxy-cluster
- The Antlia dwarf galaxy ...
- Dark matter in the core of the galaxy cluster
- Ultra-fast interstellar winds help monster black holes shape their galaxies
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Elliptical galaxies much younger than previously thought
Thursday, 21 July 2011 09:04
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| Astronomy - Galaxies |
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The standard model for elliptical galaxies formation is challenged by a new result uncovered by an international team of astronomers from the Atlas3D collaboration. Team members from CNRS, CEA, CFHT, and the Observatoire de Lyon published in the scientific journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society the first results from their study on two elliptical galaxies exhibiting features characteristic of a fairly recent merging, suggesting they are five times younger than commonly thought.
Astronomers from CNRS, CEA, CFHT, and the Observatoire de Lyon, all members of the Atlas3D international collaboration, established that the formation of the two studied elliptical galaxies (NGC 680 & NGC 5557) originated from a merger of two giant spiral galaxies that took place only 1 to 3 billions years ago. Such age estimate is based on the presence of ultra faint filaments in the distant outskirts of the galaxies. These features called tidal streams in the astronomers parlance are typical residuals from a galaxy merger. They are known not to survive in this shape and brightness for more than a few billion years, hence the new age estimate of the resulting elliptical galaxies. These structures were detected for the first time thanks to a very-deep imaging technique boosting the capabilities of CFHT's wide-field optical imager MegaCam. Source: Hawaii University |




Elliptical galaxies are usually described as old galaxies. But a study of elliptical galaxies suggest that they are much younger than peviously thought