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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The ecosystem of young galaxies
Tuesday, 30 August 2011 11:57
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| Astronomy - Galaxies |
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A team of scientists, has discovered a distant galaxy that may help elucidate two fundamental questions of galaxy formation: How galaxies take in matter and how they give off energetic radiation. During the epoch when the first galaxies formed, it is believed that they radiated energy, which hit surrounding neutral hydrogen atoms and excited them to the point where they were stripped of electrons. This produced the ionized plasma that today fills the universe. But little is known about how this high-energy light was able to escape from the immediate surroundings of a galaxy, known as the galactic halo. The galaxies we observe today tend to be completely surrounded by gaseous halos of neutral hydrogen, which absorb all light capable of ionizing hydrogen before it has a chance to escape. Rauch and his team, using the Magellan Telescopes at Las Campanas Observatory and archival images from the Hubble Space Telescope, discovered a galaxy with an extended patch of light surrounding it. The objects appearance means that roughly half of the galaxy’s radiation must be escaping and exciting hydrogen atoms outside of its halo. The key to the escape of radiation can be found in the unusual, distorted shape of the newly observed galaxy. It appears that the object had recently been hit by another galaxy, creating a hole in its halo, allowing radiation to pass through. “The loss of radiation during galactic interactions and collisions like the one seen here may be able to account for the re-ionization of the universe”, Rauch said. “This galaxy is a leftover from a population of once-numerous dwarf galaxies. And looking back to a time when the universe was more dense, crashes between galaxies would have been much more common than today.” The new observation also helps scientists better understand the flow of inbound matter, from which a galaxy originally forms. In the present case, the escaping ionizing radiation illuminated a long train of incoming gas, which is feeding new matter into the galaxy. The existence of such structures had been predicted by theory, but they had not been seen previously because they barely emit any light of their own. Their work will be published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. Source: Carneige Science Institute |




