Posted on 06/12/2006 10:04:27 PM PDT by NormsRevenge
A ball of gas more massive than a billion suns is hurtling like an enormous comet through the interior of a distant galaxy cluster.
The massive structure is held together by mysterious dark matter, astronomers said today, but it is steadily breaking apart and becoming fuel for new stars.
"This is likely a massive building block being delivered to one of the largest assembly of galaxies we know," said study team member Alexis Finoguenov of the University of Maryland, Baltimore County.
The finding is detailed in the June 6 issue of Astrophysical Journal.
Great ball of fire
The gas blob is moving at nearly 500 miles (750 kilometers) per second relative to the galaxy cluster it is embedded within. Called Abell 3266, the cluster is itself moving away from us at a speed of nearly 11,000 miles (17,000 kilometers) per second.
Nicknamed "comet," the gas ball is the largest of its kind ever detected. It measures about three million light-years across, or around five billion times the size of our solar system. The gas is estimated to be about 84 million degrees Fahrenheit (about 46 million degrees Celsius). Although this might seem hot to us, it is still relatively cool compared to some interstellar gas.
The gas blob is thought to have formed when two galaxy clustersone large and one smallcollided billions of years ago. During the crash, a blob of relatively cool gas from the small cluster was sheared off and sent careening off into space on its own.
During its travels, it got sucked in by the immense gravity of galaxy cluster Abell 3266, which it entered some 2 billion years ago. The blob is currently near the center of Abell 3266.
Star fodder
Abell 3266 is one of the most massive galaxy clusters in the southern sky, containing hundreds of galaxies and large amounts of superheated gas. Scientists think that dark mattera mysterious substance believed to make up the bulk of matter in the universeis the invisible glue holding both Abell 3266 and the gas ball together.
Using X-ray data from the European Space Agency's XMM-Newton satellite, the researchers produced an entropy map of Abell 3266 and the gas ball. In thermodynamics, entropy is a measure of the degree of randomness or disorder in a system.
The map shows gas being stripped from the gas comet's core and forming a large tail containing scattered clumps of cold, dense gas. The researchers estimate that about a sun's worth of mass is being lost by the gas comet every hour.
This stripped-off gas will likely become fuel for new stars, said study team-member Mark Henriksen, also of the University of Maryland, Baltimore County.
The gas comet is so massive that it could probably form it's own galaxy, but the researchers think the more likely scenario is that it'll add to the bulk of a giant elliptical galaxy already forming in the center of Abell 3266.
"It'll sort of collapse down to the center, and in a few billion years off it'll become stars in that galaxy," Henriksen told SPACE.com.
X-ray image showing a comet-like blob of gas about 5 million light-years long hurling through a distant galaxy cluster over 500 miles per second. The comet is confined to the orange regions in this image. The head is the lower right, with reddish areas. The tail fans outward because there is less pressure to confine it. The color red refers to regions of lower entropy. The orange regions have higher entropy. Credit: ESA/XMM-Newton/Finoguenov et al.
This entropy map separates the cold and dense gas of the comet from the hotter and more rarefied gas of the cluster. The data shows the process of gas being stripped from the comet's core (entropy goes up) and forming a large tail containing lumps of colder and denser gas. The researchers estimate that a sun's worth of mass is lost every hour. Credit: ESA/XMM-Newton/Finoguenov et al.
thats nothing, sneak a few onions into my food. :)
Great gas balls of fire ping
"In related news, scientists have renamed the giant ball of gas after Massasschusett's Senator Edward M. Kennedy..."
That and the one of Helen Thomas...
"...largest gas ball of its kind ever detected..."
Evidently the writer's never heard of Jimmy Carter.
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