News on Galaxies
- A deeper look at Centaurus A giant galaxy
- Hubble observes nebulae in distant dwarf galaxy
- 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
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Image of dark matter in the early universe
Thursday, 17 February 2011 10:04
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| Astronomy - Galaxies |
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ESA’s Herschel space observatory has discovered a population of dust-enshrouded galaxies that do not need as much dark matter as previously thought to collect gas and burst into star formation The new result is published today in a paper by Alexandre Amblard, University of California, Irvine, and colleagues.
Most of the mass of any galaxy is expected to be dark matter, a hypothetical substance that has yet to be detected but which astronomers believe must exist to provide sufficient gravity to prevent galaxies ripping themselves apart as they rotate. Current models of the birth of galaxies start with the accumulation of large amounts of dark matter. Its gravitational attraction drags in ordinary atoms. If enough atoms accumulate, a ‘starburst’ is ignited, in which stars form at rates 100–1000x faster than in our own galaxy does today. “Herschel is showing us that we don’t need quite so much dark matter as we thought to trigger a starburst,” says Asantha Cooray, University of California, Irvine, a co-author on today’s paper. This discovery was made by analysing infrared images taken by Herschel’s SPIRE (Spectral and Photometric Imaging Receiver) instrument at wavelengths of 250, 350, and 500 microns. These are roughly 1000x longer than the wavelengths visible to the human eye and reveal galaxies that are deeply enshrouded in dust. “With its very high sensitivity to the far-infrared light emitted by these young, enshrouded starburst galaxies, Herschel allows us to peer deep into the Universe and to understand how galaxies form and evolve,” says Göran Pilbratt, the ESA Herschel project scientist. There are so many galaxies in Herschel’s images that they overlap, creating a fog of infrared radiation known as the cosmic infrared background. The galaxies are not distributed randomly but follow the underlying pattern of dark matter in the Universe, and so the fog has a distinctive pattern of light and dark patches.
The calculated distribution of dark matter
Further analysis and simulations have shown that this smaller mass for the galaxies is a sweet spot for star formation. Less massive galaxies find it hard to form more than a first generation of stars before fizzling out. At the other end of the scale, more massive galaxies struggle because their gas cools rather slowly, preventing it from collapsing down to the high densities needed to ignite star formation. But at this newly identified ‘just-right’ mass of a few hundred billion solar masses, galaxies can make stars at prodigious rates and thus grow rapidly. “This is the first direct observation of the preferred mass scale for igniting a starburst,” says Dr Cooray. Models of galaxy formation can now be adjusted to reflect these new results, and astronomers can take a step closer to understanding how galaxies – including our own –came into being. Source: ESA |





