PDA

View Full Version : Hubble Spies Doomed Spiral Galaxy Plunging Into the Coma Cluster (and Losing Gas, Too)



Teh One Who Knocks
01-31-2019, 01:04 PM
By Samantha Mathewson, Space.com Contributor


https://i.imgur.com/h1vobYLh.jpg
A glowing red stream of hydrogen gas emanates from the spiral galaxy D100 as it plunges toward the center of the giant Coma galaxy cluster. Glowing blue clumps of young stars can
be seen near the middle of the tail, where there is still enough hydrogen gas to fuel star formation.
Credit: Hubble image: NASA, ESA, M. Sun (University of Alabama) and W. Cramer and J. Kenney (Yale University); Subaru image: M. Yagi (National Astronomical Observatory of Japan)


NASA's Hubble Space Telescope captured a stunning new view of a spiral galaxy that wandered too close to the massive Coma galaxy cluster and is being stripped of its gas.

The spiral galaxy, named D100, is being pulled by gravity toward the dense center of the Coma cluster, located approximately 330 million light-years from Earth. As the galaxy plunges toward the cluster, it is stripped of its gas, creating a long, thin tail that stretches about 200,000 light-years — nearly the width of two Milky Way galaxies, according to a statement from NASA.

The galaxy's tail consists of dust and hydrogen gas. As the galaxy wades through intergalactic material surrounding the cluster, gas and dust is expelled from the galaxy. [Celestial Photos: Hubble Space Telescope's Latest Cosmic Views]

Eventually, D100 will run out of hydrogen gas, which the galaxy needs in order to form new stars, and become a dead relic, according to the statement.

"This galaxy stands out as a particularly extreme example of processes common in massive clusters, where a galaxy goes from being a healthy spiral full of star formation to a red and dead galaxy," William Cramer, lead author of the study and a researcher at Yale University in Connecticut, said in the statement. "The spiral arms disappear, and the galaxy is left with no gas and only old stars. This phenomenon has been known about for several decades, but Hubble provides the best imagery of galaxies undergoing this process."

Researchers estimate that D100 has been enduring the process, also known as ram-pressure stripping, for roughly 300 million years.

While D100 is one of many galaxies in this situation, one factor distinguishes it from others that astronomers have seen and modeled: D100's tail is much more smooth and well-defined than most such galaxies, according to the study.

https://i.imgur.com/Un6Yv8ah.jpg
The spiral galaxy D100 (far right) is being stripped of its gas as it falls into the center of the Coma galaxy cluster in this view from the Hubble Space Telescope. The brown streaks near
the center of D100 are gas being stripped from the galaxy.
Credit: NASA, ESA, M. Sun (University of Alabama), and W. Cramer and J. Kenney (Yale University)

"This is a surprise, because a tail like this is not seen in most computer simulations. Most galaxies undergoing this process are more of a mess," Jeffrey Kenney, a co-author on the study who's also at Yale University, said in the statement. "The clean edges and filamentary structures of the tail suggest that magnetic fields play a prominent role in shaping it. Computer simulations show that magnetic fields form filaments in the tail's gas. With no magnetic fields, the tail is more clumpy than filamentary."

The Hubble data revealed that the gas-stripping process began on the outer edges of the galaxy and is now moving in toward the center. Hot, glowing, blue clumps of young stars also appear in the image, with the brightest such clumps in the middle of the tail, where there is still enough hydrogen gas to fuel star formation, according to the statement.

However, the researchers estimated that in a few hundred million years D100 will lose its spiral structure altogether and consist of only old, red stars. The findings were published Jan. 8 in the Astrophysical Journal.

Goofy
01-31-2019, 01:47 PM
Cool! :clap:

Hal-9000
01-31-2019, 06:29 PM
330 million light years away? :shock:

That's like next week!!

On a somewhat related story did anyone see the series of graphics starting with the Hubble telescope pointing at a strange 'empty' part of space? Turns out they magnified the area and discovered endless galaxies within, some so large they defied our current definition of how big a galaxy can get.

Hal-9000
01-31-2019, 06:32 PM
330 million light years away? :shock:

That's like next week!!



:slap: Light years are a measurement of distance, not time you dough-head.

Teh One Who Knocks
01-31-2019, 06:32 PM
It amazing when you see those pictures of galaxies like the above and realize that each one of those galaxies contains billions of stars in them. There is absolutely no way we're the only life forms in the universe. But of course unless someone comes up with a way to travel intergalactic distances, there's so many planets that no one will ever see. It's mind boggling to even think about.

Teh One Who Knocks
01-31-2019, 06:37 PM
15,000 Galaxies Shine in This 1 View from the Hubble Space Telescope

http://thumbs2.imagebam.com/4e/3c/29/69b4921109239954.jpg (http://www.imagebam.com/image/69b4921109239954)

Hal-9000
01-31-2019, 06:38 PM
It amazing when you see those pictures of galaxies like the above and realize that each one of those galaxies contains billions of stars in them. There is absolutely no way we're the only life forms in the universe. But of course unless someone comes up with a way to travel intergalactic distances, there's so many planets that no one will ever see. It's mind boggling to even think about.

I wish I would have saved the panels. Hubble pointed at a dark section of a normal space picture and then they broke it down how many galaxies and stars were within that little area. (it was like a 1/16th of inch on a larger picture of space). Trillion stars per galaxy on average, umpteen possible planets around each star, literally millions of galaxies within that small piece of space...it was amazing.

Teh One Who Knocks
01-31-2019, 06:54 PM
It's like in that thumbnail I posted above....15,000 galaxies just in that little section of space. It's crazy.

PorkChopSandwiches
01-31-2019, 06:58 PM
Thats some amazing shit

Hal-9000
01-31-2019, 06:59 PM
It's like in that thumbnail I posted above....15,000 galaxies just in that little section of space. It's crazy.

Some astronomer said that as humans, we can't grasp the nature of how big space really is and how many potential objects in space there really are.

That's why I liked reading about the Fermi Paradox that postulates theories about why or why not other life exists in the universe, and by extension why we haven't seen them.