Vancouver - October 6, 1999 - UBC scientists may be a step closer to finding the answer to one of astronomy's most perplexing questions: What is the galaxy made of? "We may have identified a component of the unknown dark matter in the galaxy -- the 90 per cent of the mass of the galaxy which we thought was invisible," says Prof. Harvey Richer, an astronomer in UBC's Physics and Astronomy Dept.Research released by a four-member team which included Richer and fellow UBC astronomer Asst. Prof. Douglas Scott, indicates that ancient white dwarf stars -- the burned-out remains of normal stars like the Sun -- may make up more than half of the invisible "dark matter" in the Milky Way Galaxy.
The team of researchers, which also included Rodrigo Ibata from Germany and Roland Gilliland from the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore, arrived at the conclusion after they compared images of the Hubble Deep Field -- the deepest optical image of the sky -- from the Hubble Space Telescope in 1995 and 1997. They found that five objects moved slightly in the foreground between the two images. The scientists believe that the objects may be old white dwarf stars.
"If this picture is correct, there will be an enormous rethinking of how galaxies formed and evolved," says Richer.
In the past, white dwarf stars have been suggested as a possible explanation of the missing matter in the galaxy but this may be the first time anybody has seen them, he says.
The team's results will be published in the October issue of The Astrophysical Journal Letters. Meanwhile, the team has plans to check their work this December when they will again use the Hubble Space Telescope to look at the same field and see if the previously detected motion in the five objects is confirmed.
A large consortium including astronomers from UBC, Victoria, Princeton University and Germany are also using the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope in Hawaii to search for more local examples of these ancient white dwarfs.
STELLAR DREAMS AT SPACE SCIENCE
Gamma Burst Overwhelms Entire Galaxy
Pasadena - September 29, 1999 -
Cosmic gamma-ray bursts, the brightest known explosions in the universe, may come from the fiery deaths of very massive stars in supernova explosions, a team of astronomers said Thursday.
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