logo
These dwarf galaxies in the Hydra cluster are baffling scientists: 'We found something we didn't expect'

These dwarf galaxies in the Hydra cluster are baffling scientists: 'We found something we didn't expect'

Yahoo27-02-2025

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission.
Astronomers have discovered something surprising about the universe's smallest and faintest class of galaxies: Ultra-Diffuse Galaxies (UDGs).
A research team studying these galaxies found that around half of the ones they investigated showed signs of motion that defy previous theories about the formation and evolution of such realms. In particular, the team found an unexpected rotational motion of stars within many of these dwarf galaxies.
The scientists reached these findings while studying stellar motion in 30 UDGs in the Hydra galaxy cluster located over 160 million light-years away from us. The findings could change our understanding of how UDGs form and evolve.
"The results we obtained were doubly satisfying," Chiara Buttitta, a researcher at the National Institute for Astrophysics and co-author of a paper on these results, said in a statement. "Not only were we able to deduce the stellar motions in these extremely faint galaxies, but we found something we didn't expect to observe."The team utilized the "Looking into the faintest With MUSE," or LEWIS, observing program, conducted by the MUSE integral field spectrograph that's installed on the Very Large Telescope (VLT). The VLT is the world's most advanced visible-light astronomical observatory, and is situated in Chile.
UDGs were first discovered in 2015; the formation and evolution of these ultrafaint, strangely elongated galaxies immediately presented a puzzle for astronomers.
The LEWIS findings allowed the new study's team to determine that UDGs dwell in environments that greatly vary in terms of their physical properties, the amount of dark matter they contain and the motions and compositions of their stars.
Specifically, the scientists were able to conduct a detailed investigation of the UDG designated "UDG32." This dwarf galaxy is located at the tail end of a filament of gas attached to the spiral galaxy dubbed "NGC 3314A."
One possible theory regarding the formation of UDGs suggests they form when filaments of gas are dragged from larger galaxies via gravitational interactions.
If gas clouds remain in these filaments, these clouds can become overly dense and collapse, forming stars that become the foundation of a UDG.
The data from LEWIS confirmed that UDG32's association with the filament tail of NGC3314A isn't the result of a coincidental alignment. There's something more that makes UDG32 appear to be situated at the tip of NGC3314A's tidal tail.
Additionally, UDG32 is more enriched in elements heavier than hydrogen and helium, which astronomers collectively call "metals," than other UDGs in the Hydra cluster.Metals are forged by the nuclear processes occurring at the hearts of stars and are dispersed when these stars explode at the ends of their lives to become the building blocks of the next generation of stars.
This is interesting because, despite the stars in UDG32 being younger than the stars in other Hydra cluster UDGs, they are richer in metals. This suggests they formed in the pre-metal-enriched gas and dust shed by a larger and more ancient galaxy, supporting the idea that this UDG was dragged from its spiral galaxy neighbor.
Related Stories:
— Largest-ever discovery of 'missing link' black holes revealed by dark energy camera (video)
— Rare string of 'cosmic pearls' dance together in the universe
— Black holes can squash star formation, James Webb Space Telescope finds
The team's results are important validation for the LEWIS project, which has thus far doubled the number of UDGs that have been analyzed spectroscopically. Additionally, LEWIS has provided the first "global" view of these faint galaxies within a galaxy cluster that is still forming.
"The LEWIS project was a challenge. When this program was accepted by ESO we realized that it was a goldmine of data to be explored. And that is what it turned out to be," Enrichetta Iodice, the LEWIS scientific director, said in the statement.
"The 'strength' of LEWIS, thanks to the integral spectroscopy of the instrument used, lies in being able to study simultaneously, for each individual galaxy, not only the motions of the stars, but also the average stellar population," Iodice added, "and, therefore, have indications on the formation age and the properties of globular clusters, fundamental tracers also for the dark matter content.
"By putting together the individual results, like in a puzzle, we reconstruct the formation history of these systems."
The team's research was detailed across two papers published in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Crashed lander looks back at Earth from the moon
Crashed lander looks back at Earth from the moon

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Crashed lander looks back at Earth from the moon

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Resilience, a lunar lander built and operated by the Japanese company ispace, was part of the Hakuto-R Mission to deploy a "Moonhouse," a tiny colorful art piece, on the moon, while also exploring its surface features using its Tenacious rover. After launching on Jan. 15 from Florida's Space Coast on Hakuto-R Mission 2, ispace's Resilience lander arrived in lunar orbit on May 6. The lander then deftly shifted its path to an orbit just 62 miles (100 kilometers) above the moon's surface. On May 27, Resilience took this photo, with a view of Japan being blocked by the clouds on Earth's surface, according to an ispace tweet. Resilience hovers over the moon in its lunar orbit, aiming for the Mare Frigoris ("Sea of Cold") on the moon's near side, as a landing site. With Resilience, the Japanese company ispace hoped to be one of the first to land a private spacecraft on the moon. Unfortunately, its first mission, in April 2023, ended in failure as the crashed during its touchdown attempt. Undeterred, ispace — in collaboration with other agencies like NASA and JAXA — designed and tested Resilience as part of the Hakuto-R Mission 2 (the R stands for "reboot"). Resilience carried five payloads, including a small 11-pound (5 kilograms) rover named Tenacious, which would have been used to collect lunar samples, according to NASA. Unfortunately, the landing for Resilience, scheduled on June 5, 2025, came to an abrupt halt when telemetry data from the lander stopped coming in right before the soft landing, leaving the world wondering what happened to Resilience. A few hours later, ispace announced that Resilience likely crashed on the moon, bringing an end to the mission. You can read more about Resilience and ispace's other missions as the company tries to return to the moon.

'Lost Colony' of Roanoke may have assimilated into Indigenous society, archaeologist claims — but not everyone is convinced
'Lost Colony' of Roanoke may have assimilated into Indigenous society, archaeologist claims — but not everyone is convinced

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

'Lost Colony' of Roanoke may have assimilated into Indigenous society, archaeologist claims — but not everyone is convinced

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Archaeologists have uncovered two large piles of iron flakes on North Carolina's Hatteras Island that they say are evidence of a 16th-century "Lost Colony" of English settlers who disappeared in 1587. But some experts are unconvinced and say more evidence is needed. "We've been digging there for 10 years off and on," Mark Horton, an archaeology professor at the Royal Agricultural University in the U.K., told Live Science, "and I think the real breakthrough was the hammer scale mixed in with 16th-century artifacts." Hammer scale is a flaky byproduct of traditional blacksmithing. When iron is heated, a thin layer of iron oxide can form, which is then crushed into small pieces as the blacksmith hammers the iron. "The colonists must have been desperate for a type of material that they otherwise didn't have," Horton said. "They're forging new iron artifacts from the material that they've got with them," he said, to make "new nails for building houses or ships." Horton studies the Lost Colony, a group of about 120 English settlers who arrived on Roanoke Island in North Carolina's Outer Banks in 1587. The colonists struggled to survive and sent their leader, John White, back to England for supplies. When White returned in 1590, he couldn't find his compatriots — but he discovered the word "CROATOAN" carved into wood. For centuries, historians and archaeologists have been puzzled by the disappearance of the colony. They've wondered whether the Croatoan tribe killed the settlers or whether the English moved elsewhere, perhaps to live with members of the Croatoan tribe on what is now called Hatteras Island. Related: Jamestown colonists killed and ate the dogs of Indigenous Americans "But then last summer, we did an excavation on Hatteras Island, and we found hammer scale in a pit underneath a thick shell midden that contains virtually no European material in it at all," Horton said, adding that he thinks the English basically assimilated into the Indigenous tribe. Radiocarbon dating of the layer of dirt in which the hammer scale was found suggests its age aligns with the Lost Colony. Since hammer scale is waste and not something that is traded, and because the Indigenous people are not known to have used iron forging technology, this iron trash strongly suggests that the English settlers made it to Hatteras Island in the late 16th century, Horton said. His group's finding has not yet been published in a peer-reviewed journal. The new discovery fits in well with historical and archaeological information, Kathleen DuVal, a history professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, told Live Science. "It absolutely makes sense that the Lost Colony would have moved to Hatteras Island," DuVal said. "They wrote exactly where they were going: to Croatoan." But not everyone is convinced by the piles of hammer scale. "I would like to see a hearth if we're talking about forging activity," Charles Ewen, a professor emeritus of archaeology at East Carolina University, told Live Science. And even then, the hammer scale may be from Indigenous people's repurposing of the colonists' items for their own use, Ewen said, or it could even be trash from 16th-century explorers and settlers who stopped over while sailing the Gulf Stream up the East Coast. "The hammer scale is just not doing it for me without good context — and without a report, I'm not seeing good context," he said. Horton said that, with archaeological excavations largely complete at the site — which is on private land, with cooperation from the landowner — he and his team plan to move forward with a publication. RELATED STORIES —Bear hair and fish weirs: Meet the Indigenous people combining modern science with ancestral principles to protect the land —Ancient DNA reveals mysterious Indigenous group from Colombia that disappeared 2,000 years ago —Ancient Indigenous lineage of Blackfoot Confederacy goes back 18,000 years to last ice age, DNA reveals "The hammer scale is another piece of really compelling evidence that we've got," Horton said, "but there are still several loose ends." For example, it is still a mystery whether some of the colonists moved elsewhere and whether some of them died at the Roanoke Island or Hatteras Island settlements. Ewen, who co-authored the 2024 book "Becoming the Lost Colony: The History, Lore and Popular Culture of the Roanoke Mystery" (McFarland, 2024), said the archaeological and historical evidence does not clarify what happened to the Lost Colony. But he thinks that someday, the mystery might be solved, particularly "if we could find European burials that we could tie to the 16th century with European materials and not trade items," Ewen said.

Why Elon Musk's satellites are 'dropping like flies'
Why Elon Musk's satellites are 'dropping like flies'

Yahoo

time16 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Why Elon Musk's satellites are 'dropping like flies'

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Elon Musk has no shortage of targets for his animosity: the media, "woke" progressives, the trans "agenda" and, most recently, his former best buddy Donald Trump. But one less expected Musk adversary is more powerful than them all: the Sun. SpaceX's vast network of Starlink internet service satellites are "dropping like flies", due to an extraterrestrial weather phenomenon caused by the Sun, said Futurism. And it's only set to get worse. The thousands of Starlink satellites orbiting our planet have given space scientists a "golden opportunity to study the effects" of the Sun's activity on the lifespan of these "minimalist, constellation-based spacecraft", said Futurism. And it appears that Musk's "space internet constellation" is "particularly prone to the effect of geomagnetic storms", triggered by eruptions from the Sun, said The Independent. These "ferocious solar storms", Nasa scientists have found, are causing many of Musk's low-orbit satellites to fall to Earth "faster than expected". The impact is particularly significant at the moment because the Sun is approaching the peak of an 11-year activity cycle, "known as the solar maximum", which provokes "large amounts of extreme space weather". The earlier than predicted satellite "re-entries" could "increase the chances of them not burning up properly in the Earth's atmosphere". and debris reaching the Earth. However, so far, the "only known instance" of this happening was in August 2024, when a piece of a Starlink satellite was discovered on a farm in Canada. The solar storm problem threatens one of Musk's biggest power grabs to date. When his engineers "bundled a batch of prototype satellites into a rocket's nose cone six years ago, there were fewer than 2,000 functional satellites in Earth's orbit". Now more than 7,000 of his satellites now surround Earth, "like a cloud of gnats", said The Atlantic. This is the most dominant any individual has been in the "orbital realm" since the late 1950s, when Sergei Pavlovich Korolev, the Soviet engineer who developed Sputnik and its launch vehicle, was "the only guy in town" as far as satellites were concerned, space historian Jonathan McDowell told the magazine. But the Sun is an adversary not even Musk can overcome. Solar storm forecasting "has significantly improved over the past few years", Piyush Mehta, a US professor of aerospace engineering, wrote on The Conversation in 2022 but "there is only so much shielding that can be done in the face of a powerful geomagnetic storm". The Sun is "essential for life to go on," he said, but, like a child who often throws tantrums, "its ever-changing disposition make things challenging".

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store