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Group Living Takes A Toll On Galaxies

While a green haze of hydrogen gas permeates some of the galaxies in this Hickson Compact Group, others, such as the spiral galaxy on the left, have little to no gas associated with them. This false color image was obtained using the Very Large Array and the Digitized Sky Survey 2. Image credit: Min Yun/UM Amherst
by Staff Writers
Calgary, Alberta (SPX) Jun 7, 2006
Astronomers have detected substantial amounts of filamentary cold gas in compact groups of galaxies, highlighting what may be an important force in galactic evolution.

The findings also raise the possibility that more matter than previously thought might be tied up in these galaxy groups, captured in the lattice of the cosmic web.

The research was presented at the 208th meeting of the American Astronomical Association by Sanchayeeta Borthakur of the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. Lourdes Verdes-Montenegro, of Instituto de Astrofisica de Andalucia in Spain, also collaborated.

Most spiral galaxies, such as the Milky Way, are brimming with cold gas that fuels the creation of stars. These relatively young galaxies shine with bluish light and are scattered throughout the universe, often in little groups.

Elliptical galaxies, on the other hand, tend to shine red and live a crammed existence with thousands like them in giant galactic clusters. These enormous, older galaxies no longer make stars, because they have been stripped of their gas, which gets swirled into the cluster's center, collecting in a massive hot soup astronomers call the intracluster medium.

Recently astronomers have noticed that some groups of spiral galaxies don't contain as much hydrogen gas as expected and are no longer birthing new stars, qualities usually found in older galaxies living out their years within a cluster.

"The spiral galaxies in the groups we looked at look old and tired. It's as if they've prematurely aged," Yun said.

Astronomers are still trying to figure out what happens between being a young, blue galaxy and an old, red one, Yun said. Perhaps group living was taking a toll on these young galaxies and, like the intracluster medium, the gravitational forces of an intragroup medium were stripping them of their star fuel.

Presence of intragroup gas had been confirmed by recent observations using X-rays, but the amount of gas detected by the X-rays couldn't account for the amount missing from the galaxies.

So, Yun's team began observing 25 Hickson Compact Groups - compact, relatively isolated, groups of galaxies, some of which had shown this mysterious gas depletion.

The scientists used the National Science Foundation's Robert C. Byrd Green Bank Telescope in West Virginia, operated by the National Radio Astronomy Observatory.

The Green Bank Telescope uses radio waves and has a 100 meter aperture lens. It can point into the sky more precisely than one thousandth of a degree and is the most sensitive tool astronomers have for detecting neutral hydrogen gas in galaxies, gas not visible with X-ray observations.

The researchers detected far more gas than they would have imagined, Yun said. In groups dominated by spiral galaxies, the astronomers found about 50 percent more gas than they had detected using the NSF's Very Large Array in New Mexico - also operated by the NRAO.

Groups containing elliptical or lenticular galaxies had almost 100 percent more gas than had been previously detected. Just as surprising as the quantity of gas is its temperature, Yun said. The gas is cold and neutral, not the fiery hot gas of the intracluster medium.

Intracluster mediums have enormous amounts of mass, both from ordinary matter and from dark matter, and hence have extremely strong gravitational fields. This can lead to excessively high temperatures - upwards of a million degrees - so astronomers hadn't looked much for cold, neutral gas.

"It makes sense actually," Yun said, the groups aren't as massive as clusters, so the gas isn't as hot. Borthakur's calculations suggest this gas can remain cold and neutral for as much as 100 million years or more in the group environment.

The findings suggest this environment plays a far more important role in the evolution of galaxies than astronomers previously thought. "The local environment clearly can influence a galaxy's gas content and its ability to form stars," Yun said. Since these qualities are one measure of a galaxy's age, the findings may prompt a re-evaluation of the cosmic clock, he added.

Another intriguing aspect of this cold neutral hydrogen gas is its distribution, says Borthakur. Analyses suggest the gas forms sheet-like or filamentary structures, rather than a single diffuse cloud that surrounds the entire group.

This raises the possibility the intragroup medium builds up through the accumulation of matter from the cosmic web, the large scale structure astronomers think could link all of the matter in the universe, as predicted by the theory of dark matter.

"The only way a galaxy could be cleanly stripped of its gas is through a collision with more gas," Yun said. Gas accounts for far more of a galaxy's mass than its stars do, such that if an outer galaxy falls into a cluster its gas is stripped, subsumed by the intracluster medium.

"A lot of the matter of the universe may be tied up in these small galaxy groups," he said.

Future experiments designed to determine the temperature, density and the total mass of this intragroup medium will be able to determine quantitatively its origin and the importance of this gas in shaping the evolution of most galaxies.

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Young Supernova Remnants Not Dusty Enough
Calgary, Alberta (SPX) Jun 07, 2006
One of the youngest supernova remnants known - a glowing red ball of dust created by the explosion 1,000 years ago of a supermassive star in the neighboring Small Magellanic Cloud - exhibits the same problem as exploding stars in the Milky Way galaxy: too little dust.







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