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taylormemer 7th February 2006 05:43

Ongoing Growth
 
http://www.space.com/images/mm_galax...h060206_ff.jpg

Ongoing Growth: Galaxies Grab Intergalactic Gas

By Ker Than

Staff Writer
posted: 06 February 2006
06:49 am ET

____________________________________________________________

Astronomers have detected a faint halo of hot gas surrounding and falling into a spiral galaxy located 100 million light-years from Earth.

The discovery provides a long-sought missing link in theories of galaxy formation and helps solve the riddle of where galaxies get the fuel they need to create new stars billions of years after they have already formed.


"What we are likely witnessing here is the ongoing galaxy formation process," said study leader Kristian Pedersen of the University of Copehnhagen, Denmark.

The spherical gas halo was found centered on the nucleus of NGC 5746, a spiral galaxy like our own
Milky Way
. The halo, not visible in optical wavelengths, has a radius of about 60,000 light-years and was detected with NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory.
____________________________________________________________
Images:


http://www.space.com/images/060203_ngc5746_02.jpg
A halo of hot, infalling gas surrounding galaxy NGC 5746. It was detected with NASA's Chandra X-ray telescope. Credit: NASA/CXC/U. Copenhagen/K.Pedersen et al, Optical: Palomar DSS
____________________________________________________________

Oddly Quiet


Scientists also think that galaxies can grow by
cannibalizing
other galaxies, and recent studies suggest galaxies can be shaped by the activity of massive
black holes
in their centers.

Compared to our own Milky Way, NGC 5746 is quiet. The galaxy displays no unusual star formation and no energetic activity from its central region. It is therefore unlikely that the detected halo is produced by gas ejected out of the galaxy, which was something astronomers
detected
in 2001.

Instead, the researchers believe the galaxy’s immense gravity is attracting the gas and shaping it into a spherical halo. The gas falls inward toward the galaxy’s central core and fuels the birth of
new stars
.

The finding supports computer simulations that show galaxies building up gradually from the merger of small hot clouds of intergalactic gas and dark matter. If this
theory
is correct, then the gas halos enveloping the galaxies should be detectable.

"People suggested that you’d see this gas draining down and radiating its energy as it fell into the galaxy," study co-author Richard Bower of Durham University in England told SPACE.com.

Technology Needed

Scientists have been trying for years to detect these halos of infalling gas but have been unsuccessful until now. The researchers credit the discovery of NGC 5746’s halo to advances in X-ray technology which have allowed telescopes to detect lower luminosities.

"The halos exist, but are so faint that an extremely sensitive telescope such as Chandra is needed to detect them," Pedersen said.

Without a hot halo of gas, scientists would expect star formation within galaxies to eventually cease.

"If halos didn’t exist, it would just be a big coincidence," Bower said. "Why do we just happen to exist in this epoch where galaxies are on the verge of running out of gas? The existence of hot halos that are refueling the galaxy makes that much less of a paradox."
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More Stories____________________________________________________________
CREDIT: SPACE.com

Spazz333 7th February 2006 06:04

Welcome back Taylor. Without you no one here would known anything about space. :)

Cylob 7th February 2006 06:26

It's a fascinating subject, not to mention light relief from the humdrum world around.

ElChevelle 7th February 2006 13:21

The Final Frontier always holds great new information thanks to our technology.
Thanks for all your news, Taylor:up:


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