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The Largest Rotating Objects in the Universe: Galactic Filaments Hundreds of Millions of Light-Years Long
Universe Today ^ | 6/17/2021 | Evan Gough

Posted on 06/17/2021 1:44:52 PM PDT by LibWhacker

Posted on June 17, 2021June 17, 2021

The Largest Rotating Objects in the Universe: Galactic Filaments Hundreds of Millions of Light-Years Long

We’ve known for a while about the large-scale structure of the Universe. Galaxies reside in filaments hundreds of millions of light-years long, on a backbone of dark matter. And, where those filaments meet, there are galaxy clusters. Between them are massive voids, where galaxies are sparse. Now a team of astronomers in Germany and their colleagues in China and Estonia have made an intriguing discovery.

These massive filaments are rotating, and this kind of rotation on such a massive scale has never been seen before.

Obviously, there’s no way to take an actual picture of the Universe’s large-scale structure. But there are some almost-famous images that come from the Millennium Simulation Program. The Millennium Simulation was a super-computer simulation of a cubic portion of the Universe over 2 billion light-years on each side. The image contains about 20 million individual galaxies organized in filaments and clumps, and it was our first real glimpse of the Universe’s LSS.

It’s remarkable to look at that image now and imagine those filaments rotating.Image of the large-scale structure of the Universe, showing filaments and voids within the cosmic structure. Credit: Millennium Simulation Project

The team of astronomers behind this discovery worked with data from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS.) The SDSS created a very detailed 3D map of the Universe, so SDSS data was critical to the team’s discovery.

“By mapping the motion of galaxies in these huge cosmic superhighways using the Sloan Digital Sky survey – a survey of hundreds of thousands of galaxies – we found a remarkable property of these filaments: they spin.” says Peng Wang, first author of the now published study and astronomer at the AIP (Institute for Astrophysics Potsdam).

Each of the galaxies in the filaments amounts to no more than a speck of dust on the grand scale, and they’re not only rotating but moving along the tendrils as if they’re pipelines.

“They move on helixes or corkscrew like orbits, circling around the middle of the filament while travelling along it.”Noam Libeskind, Study Co-Author, AIP.

“Despite being thin cylinders – similar in dimension to pencils – hundreds of millions of light years long, but just a few million light years in diameter, these fantastic tendrils of matter rotate,” added Noam Libeskind, initiator of the project at the AIP. “On these scales the galaxies within them are themselves just specs of dust. They move on helixes or corkscrew like orbits, circling around the middle of the filament while travelling along it. Such a spin has never been seen before on such enormous scales, and the implication is that there must be an as yet unknown physical mechanism responsible for torquing these objects.”

The fact that these filaments spin is difficult to visualize, and fascinating once you succeed. But the discovery is about more than our own fascination. These are the largest objects we’ve ever seen spinning, and that means that angular momentum can take place on a massive scale. One of the mysteries in cosmology is how that angular momentum is generated on such a massive scale since there was no primordial rotation in the early Universe.

The discovery rests on observations of individual galaxies in the filaments and their Doppler shift. In this study, red-shift is a proxy for rotation, Red-shifted galaxies are receding, and blue-shifted galaxies are approaching. This figure from the paper shows the filament rotation speed as a function of the distance between galaxies and the filament spine. The distance of galaxies from the filament spine in the receding region is displayed in red and ascribed positive values, while the distance of galaxies in the approaching region is marked in blue and ascribed negative values. Error bars represent the standard deviation about the mean. Image Credit: Wang et al 2021.This figure from the paper shows the filament rotation speed as a function of the distance between galaxies and the filament spine. The distance of galaxies from the filament spine in the receding region is displayed in red and ascribed positive values, while the distance of galaxies in the approaching region is marked in blue and ascribed negative values. Error bars represent the standard deviation about the mean. Image Credit: Wang et al 2021.

In the current working model of the Universe’s structural formation, overdensities grow via gravitational instability. Material from underdense regions flows into regions of overdensity. But that flow of material has no rotation or curl to it. That’s why cosmologists say that there was no rotation in the early Universe. And here’s where this discovery gets more interesting.

The rotation evident in these filaments of galaxies must be generated as the structures form. And these filaments and the rest of the cosmic web are connected to the formation and evolution of galaxies themselves. They also have a powerful effect on the spin of individual galaxies and can regulate how a galaxy and its dark matter halo rotate. There’s an unknown piece in all of this: scientists don’t yet know how our current understanding can predict that the filaments themselves spin.

“Such a spin has never been seen before on such enormous scales, and the implication is that there must be an as yet unknown physical mechanism responsible for torquing these objects.”Noam Libeskind, Study Co-Author, AIP.

Before this study, other scientists have theorized that these filaments spin. For example, Dr. Mark Neyrinck, a Fellow at the Department of Theoretical Physics at the University of the Basque Country, Spain, is known for theorizing on this. He’s also known for developing the “origami” description of cosmic structure formation. In a 2016 article in The Paper he said, “…if galaxies rotate (and they do), so must filaments sticking out of them. Furthermore, galaxies joined by a filament should rotate mostly together, like objects attached to the ends of a rod. In fact, this is consistent with astronomical observations; nearby galaxies tend to be spinning in the same direction.”

Dr. Neyrinck’s work was an important starting point for the team behind this paper.

“Motivated by the suggestion from the theorist Dr. Mark Neyrinck that filaments may spin, we examined the observed galaxy distribution, looking for filament rotation,” says co-author Noam Libeskind. “It’s fantastic to see this confirmation that intergalactic filaments rotate in the real Universe, as well as in computer simulation.”

The team used a sophisticated mapping method that divided the observed galaxy distribution into segments. Then each of the filaments was approximated by a cylinder. The galaxies in the filament were then divided into two regions on either side of the filament’s spine. Then they carefully measured the mean redshift difference between the two regions. “The mean redshift difference is a proxy for the velocity difference (the Doppler shift) between galaxies on the receding and approaching side of the filament tube,” the authors write. That’s how they measured the filaments’ rotation.

In their paper, the team writes that what they found cannot be random. “What is measured and presented here is the redshift difference between two regions on either side of a hypothesized spin axis that is coincident with the filament spine. The full distribution of this quantity is inconsistent with random regardless of the viewing angle formed with the line of sight…”

However, the researchers caution, their results don’t imply that every filament in the Universe is rotating. That would be an over-reach. “This work does not predict that every single filament in the Universe is rotating,” they write, “rather that there are subsamples—intimately connected to the viewing angle end point mass—that show a clear signal consistent with rotation. This is the main finding of this work.”

“Taken together,” the team writes in their conclusion, “the current study and <references> demonstrate that angular momentum can be generated on unprecedented scales, opening the door to a new understanding of cosmic spin.”

Lead author of this work is Peng Wang, an astronomer at the Institute for Astrophysics Potsdam (AIP). The title of the paper is “Possible observational evidence for cosmic filament spin.” It’s published in Nature Astronomy.



TOPICS: Astronomy; Science
KEYWORDS: filaments; galactic; rotating; universe
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1 posted on 06/17/2021 1:44:52 PM PDT by LibWhacker
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To: LibWhacker

I just read the title of this article aloud while we wait for the trainees to come in.

His response was “Largest Object — your mom”.

Don’t know why I am laughing at this.


2 posted on 06/17/2021 1:47:00 PM PDT by Jewbacca (The residents of Iroquois territory may not determine whether Jews may live in Jerusalem)
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To: LibWhacker

I hope it’s revolving and not actually rotating else we got more than meteors to worry about.


3 posted on 06/17/2021 1:47:52 PM PDT by monkeyshine (live and let live is dead)
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To: LibWhacker

Space is kewl. But weird.


4 posted on 06/17/2021 1:48:03 PM PDT by LIConFem (Bring a Commie to room temperature for Mommy)
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To: LibWhacker
Umbilical cords?

5 posted on 06/17/2021 1:48:04 PM PDT by BitWielder1 (I'd rather have Unequal Wealth than Equal Poverty.)
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To: LibWhacker

So that’s how the aliens are getting here


6 posted on 06/17/2021 1:48:29 PM PDT by Pollard
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To: Jewbacca

Yo mama so fat she snacks on galactic tendrils


7 posted on 06/17/2021 1:49:18 PM PDT by monkeyshine (live and let live is dead)
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To: LibWhacker

I had a galactic filament once.


8 posted on 06/17/2021 1:49:37 PM PDT by Eddie01
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To: BitWielder1

Veins. And galaxies are corpuscles.


9 posted on 06/17/2021 1:53:14 PM PDT by Larry Lucido (Donate! Don't just post clickbait!)
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To: LibWhacker

This just means we are being flushed down the cosmological toilet.


10 posted on 06/17/2021 1:53:15 PM PDT by fruser1
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To: LibWhacker

Well, that’s just plain neat! And to make a comment very few will understand but is most appropriate and the first thought that popped into my head: “Looks like this is Steve Ditko’s universe and we’re just living in it!”

Thanks for posting this!


11 posted on 06/17/2021 1:56:22 PM PDT by Retrofitted
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To: LibWhacker

Double helix in the sky tonight
Throw out the hardware
Let’s do it right
Aja
When all my dime dancin’ is through
I run to you


12 posted on 06/17/2021 2:01:36 PM PDT by Larry Lucido (Donate! Don't just post clickbait!)
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To: BitWielder1
"Umbilical cords?"

Brain neurons.

13 posted on 06/17/2021 2:07:39 PM PDT by mosaicwolf
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To: LibWhacker

Isn’t Dark matter theoretical? If so how do they know “Galaxies reside... on a backbone of dark matter”.


14 posted on 06/17/2021 2:12:50 PM PDT by Brooklyn Attitude (I went to bed on November 3rd 2020 and woke up in 1984.)
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To: BitWielder1

Welcome to the fractal universe....with all that is hinted at by that...


15 posted on 06/17/2021 2:12:54 PM PDT by cgbg (A kleptocracy--if they can keep it. Think of it as the Cantillon Effect in action.)
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To: Brooklyn Attitude

“dark matter” is science talk for “we have no clue what that stuff is...”

;-)


16 posted on 06/17/2021 2:14:06 PM PDT by cgbg (A kleptocracy--if they can keep it. Think of it as the Cantillon Effect in action.)
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To: LibWhacker

“Galaxies reside in filaments hundreds of millions of light-years long, on a backbone of dark matter.”

BS, the filaments are plasma, not dark matter.


17 posted on 06/17/2021 2:15:00 PM PDT by Boogieman
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To: LibWhacker

Is that the Kessel Run?


18 posted on 06/17/2021 2:18:10 PM PDT by Magnum44 (...against all enemies, foreign and domestic...)
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To: LibWhacker

“These massive filaments are rotating, and this kind of rotation on such a massive scale has never been seen before.”

Did Einstein’s theory of relativity predict anything like these?


19 posted on 06/17/2021 2:18:38 PM PDT by antidemoncrat (somRead more at: https://economicti)
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To: cgbg; Brooklyn Attitude

Yes, but more to the point, we know in physics exactly what kind of filaments form helical pairs that rotate around each other, and we can duplicate the same behavior in the lab that they are observing in these galactic filaments. They are plasma filaments, not dark matter. It’s electromagnetic interaction that causes the rotation, which is completely explainable with plasma filaments, whereas “dark matter filaments” wouldn’t offer any explanation for the rotation at all.


20 posted on 06/17/2021 2:19:04 PM PDT by Boogieman
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