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- 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
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- The most excotic known galaxy
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- 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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Small galaxy has collided with the Milkyway twice
Thursday, 15 September 2011 11:48
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| Astronomy - Galaxies |
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Astronomers have shown how two collision with a smaller galaxy named Sagittarius has shaped the Milky Way galaxy’s iconic spiral arms form. A dwarf galaxy named Sagittarius loaded with dark matter has careened twice through our much larger home galaxy in the past two billion years, according to telescope data and detailed simulations, and is lined up to do it again. As the galaxies collide, the force of the impact sends stars streaming from both in long loops. Those continue to swell with stars and are gradually tugged outward by the Milky Way’s rotation into a familiar ringed arm. It’s the weighty dark matter from Sagittarius that provided the initial push, the researchers said. “It’s kind of like putting a fist into a bathtub of water as opposed to your little finger,” said James Bullock, a theoretical cosmologist who studies galaxy formation. The smaller galaxy pays a steep price though – sucked inward repeatedly by the Milky Way’s mightier gravity, it’s being ripped apart by the blows, sending huge amounts of its stars and dark matter reeling into the new arms. “When all that dark matter first smacked into the Milky Way, 80% to 90% of it was stripped off,” explained lead author Chris Purcell, who did the work with Bullock at UCI and is now at the University of Pittsburgh. “That first impact triggered instabilities that were amplified, and quickly formed spiral arms and associated ring-like structures in the outskirts of our galaxy.” The Sagittarius galaxy is due to strike the southern face of the Milky Way disk fairly soon, Purcell said – in another 10 million years or so. The research was published today in the journal Nature. Additional authors are UCI doctoral students Erik Tollerud and Miguel Rocha, and Sukanya Chakrabarti of Florida Atlantic University in Boca Raton. |




