Wednesday, 11 March 2015

Our new neighbours: Rare dwarf galaxies found orbiting the Milky Way









The Milky Way galaxy now officially has new neighbours. Nine dwarf

satellites, including three tiny galaxies, in orbit around our home

galaxy were spotted by astronomers at the University of Cambridge in the

skies of the southern hemisphere. The galaxies were found near the

Large and Small Magellanic Cloud — the two largest and most well-known

dwarf galaxies in orbit around the Milky Way.

“The discovery of so many satellites in such a small area of the sky was completely unexpected,” said lead author Dr Sergey Koposov of Cambridge’s Institute of Astronomy. “I could not believe my eyes.”


Discovered in newly released imaging data from the Dark Energy Survey,

the find consists of three confirmed dwarf galaxies and six objects

that could be either be dwarf galaxies or globular clusters — the

difference being that the stars in globular clusters are not held

together with dark matter.



Dwarf galaxies are the smallest of all

the observed galactic structures, sometimes as small as just 5,000 stars

— compared to the Milky Way’s estimated 200 to 400 billion stars. It

is also estimated that they contain up to 99 percent dark matter, and

just one percent observable matter, which makes them perfect for testing

dark matter models.




dwarfgalaxies2.jpg
Previously confirmed dwarf galaxies (blue) and the newly discovered satellites (red).Image: Yao-Yuan Mao, Ralf Kaehler, Risa Wechsler (KIPAC/SLAC)


“Dwarf

satellites are the final frontier for testing our theories of dark

matter,” said study co-author Dr Vasily Belokurov of the Institute of

Astronomy. “We need to find them to determine whether our cosmological

picture makes sense. Finding such a large group of satellites near the

Magellanic Clouds was surprising, though, as earlier surveys of the

southern sky found very little, so we were not expecting to stumble on

such treasure.”



The closest of the three dwarf galaxies, 97,000

light-years away and located in the constellation Reticulum, is in the

process of being pulled apart by the Milky Way’s enormous tidal forces.

The farthest and brightest, 1.2 million light-years away in the

constellation Eridanus, is right on the edge of the Milky Way and is on

the verge of being pulled in.


dwarfgalaxies3.jpg
The locations of the three new confirmed dwarf galaxies in relation to the Magellanic Clouds.

University of Cambridge



“These

results are very puzzling,” said co-author Wyn Evans of the Institute

of Astronomy. “Perhaps they were once satellites that orbited the

Magellanic Clouds and have been thrown out by the interaction of the

Small and Large Magellanic Cloud. Perhaps they were once part of a

gigantic group of galaxies that — along with the Magellanic Clouds —

are falling into our Milky Way galaxy.”



Current estimates put the

possible number of dwarf galaxies in orbit around the Milky Way in the

hundreds, but they are very hard to find, since they are so faint. So

far, fewer than 30 dwarf satellite galaxies have been identified.



The

full study was published in The Astrophysical Journal. “Beasts of the

Southern Wild. Discovery of a large number of Ultra Faint satellites in

the vicinity of the Magellanic Clouds” can be found online.




Source Article from http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/AscensionEarth2012/~3/ivb7WqB_d4U/our-new-neighbours-rare-dwarf-galaxies.html



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