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STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Cool Theory on Galaxy Formation
by Staff Writers
Sydney, Australia (SPX) Dec 01, 2016


illustration only

Giant galaxies may grow from cold gas that condenses as stars rather than forming in hot, violent mergers.

The surprise finding was made with CSIRO and US radio telescopes by an international team including four CSIRO researchers and published in the journal Science today [Friday, 2 December].

The biggest galaxies are found at the hearts of clusters, huge swarms of galaxies.

"Until now we thought these giants formed by small galaxies falling together and merging," team member Professor Ray Norris of CSIRO and Western Sydney University said.

But the researchers, led by Dr. Bjorn Emonts from the Centro de Astrobiologia in Spain, saw something very different when they looked at a protocluster, an embryonic cluster, 10 billion light-years away.

This protocluster was known to have a giant galaxy called the Spiderweb forming at its centre.

Dr. Emonts' team found that the Spiderweb is wallowing in a huge cloud of very cold gas that could be up to 100 billion times the mass of our Sun.

Most of this gas must be hydrogen, the basic material from which stars and galaxies form.

Earlier work by another team had revealed young stars all across the protocluster. The new finding suggests that "rather than forming from infalling galaxies, the Spiderweb may be condensing directly out of the gas," according to Professor Norris.

The astronomers didn't see the hydrogen gas directly but located it by detecting a tracer gas, carbon monoxide (CO), which is easier to find.

The Very Large Array telescope in the USA showed that most of the CO could not be in the small galaxies in the protocluster, while CSIRO's Australia Telescope Compact Array saw the large cloud surrounding the galaxies.

"This is the sort of science the Compact Array excels at," Professor Norris said.

Co-author Professor Matthew Lehnert from the Institut Astrophysique de Paris described the gas as "shockingly cold" - about minus 200 degrees Celsius (minus 350 degrees Fahrenheit).

"We expected a fiery process - lots of galaxies falling in and heating gas up," he said.

Where the carbon monoxide came from is a puzzle.

"It's a by-product of previous stars but we cannot say for sure where it came from or how it accumulated in the cluster core," Dr. Emonts said.

"To find out we'd have to look even deeper into the universe's history."

Research report


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Previous Report
STELLAR CHEMISTRY
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Lisbon, Portugal (SPX) Nov 25, 2016
Using data from the SDSS1 and CALIFA2 surveys, a team3 of astronomers, led by Jean Michel Gomes and Polychronis Papaderos from the Instituto de Astrofisica e Ciencias do Espaco (IA4), in Portugal, discovered in the optical faint star-forming spiral-arm-like features in the periphery of nearby early-type galaxies5. This work6 was presented yesterday, during the 2nd SELGFIS Advanced School on Inte ... read more


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