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Keyword: galaxies

Brevity: Headers | « Text »
  • Spectacular spiral galaxies more than 60million light years away

    10/30/2010 9:03:41 PM PDT · by fightinJAG · 42 replies
    Daily Mail (U.K.) ^ | Oct. 29, 2010 | Staff
    Displayed in all their exquisite detail, six spectacular galaxies are pictured more clearly that they ever have before. All of them are beautiful examples of spiral galaxies and were captured in images from ESO’s Very Large Telescope (VLT) at the Paranal Observatory in Chile. The pictures were taken in infrared light, using the impressive power of the HAWK-I camera, and will help astronomers understand how the remarkable spiral patterns in galaxies form and evolve.-incredible-new-detail.html#ixzz13uAfNijg
  • Total Amateurs Discover 'Green Pea' Galaxies

    07/28/2009 8:50:08 AM PDT · by NormsRevenge · 6 replies · 494+ views
    Space.com ^ | 7/27/09
    Armchair astronomers have helped discover a batch of tiny galaxies that may help professional astronomers understand how galaxies formed stars in the early universe. Dubbed the "Green Peas," the galaxies are forming stars 10 times faster then the Milky Way despite being 10 times smaller and 100 times less massive. They are between 1.5 billion and 5 billion light years away "These are among the most extremely active star-forming galaxies we've ever found," said Carolin Cardamone, lead author of a paper on the discoveries to be published in an upcoming issue of the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society....
  • Astronomers: Dark Matter Guides Universe's Structure

    04/05/2009 12:46:41 PM PDT · by BuckeyeTexan · 31 replies · 1,223+ views
    Information Week ^ | 04/05/2009 | Bob Evans
    A 10-year study of 100,000 galaxies close to our own offers compelling proof that long-hypothesized "dark matter" does exist and is in fact a guiding force behind the structure of the universe, a team of Australian, British, and American astronomers revealed this week. Saying that "the universe we see is really quite structured," one of the lead researchers explained that the 10-year "census" of galaxies near our own Milky Way offers powerful evidence that this invisible dark matter "seems to hold the galaxies together." The dark matter's influence on galaxies "stops their constituent stars from flying off and it seems...
  • Do dwarf galaxies favour MOND over dark matter?

    04/03/2008 8:16:25 PM PDT · by LibWhacker · 16 replies · 129+ views
    A detailed analysis of eight dwarf galaxies that orbit the Milky Way indicates that their orbital behaviour can be explained more accurately with Modified Newtonian Dynamics (MOND) than by the rival, but more widely accepted, theory of dark matter. The results were presented by Garry Angus, of the University of St Andrews, at the RAS National Astronomy Meeting in Belfast on Wednesday 2nd April. 'MOND was first suggested to account for things that we see in the distant universe. This is the first detailed study in which we've been able to test out the theory on something close to home....
  • Perfectly Aligned Galaxies Found For The First Time

    01/11/2008 6:29:35 PM PST · by blam · 18 replies · 160+ views
    National Geographic News ^ | 1-11-2008 | John Roach
    Perfectly Aligned Galaxies Found For the First Time John Roach for National Geographic NewsJanuary 11, 2008 Astronomers have found three galaxies in a never before seen perfect alignment—a discovery that may help scientists better understand the mysterious dark matter and dark energy believed to dominate the universe. The three galaxies are like beads on a string, one directly behind the other, scientists announced yesterday at a meeting of the American Astronomical Society in Austin, Texas. This makes the massive galaxy closest to Earth appear nestled in a pair of circular halos known as Einstein rings. The phenomenon occurs because the...
  • Scientists discover 'teenager galaxies'

    11/28/2007 7:12:49 PM PST · by NormsRevenge · 15 replies · 32+ views
    AP on Yahoo ^ | 11/28/07 | Raphael G. Satter - ap
    LONDON - Young galaxies, so faint that scientists struggled to prove they were there at all, have been discovered by aiming two of the world's most powerful telescopes at a single patch of sky for nearly 100 hours. An international group of researchers has identified 27 pre-galactic fragments, dubbed "teenager galaxies," which they hope will help astronomers understand how our own Milky Way reached adulthood. Cambridge University scientist Martin Haehnelt said his team used the European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope and the Gemini Telescope in Chile to monitor a section of the universe for 92 hours — the equivalent...
  • Black Holes Launch Powerful Cosmic Winds

    11/05/2007 7:04:25 PM PST · by NormsRevenge · 5 replies · 96+ views
    Space.com on Yahoo ^ | 11/05/07 | Charles Q. Choi
    Black holes often are thought of as just endless pits in space and time that destroy everything they pull toward them. But new findings confirm the reverse is true, too: Black holes can drive extraordinarily powerful winds that push out and force star formation and shape the fate of a galaxy. Supermassive black holes are suspected to lurk in the hearts of many—if not all—large galaxies. These holes drag gas inward, which accrues in rapidly spinning, glowing disks. Astronomers have long thought that such "accretion disks" give off mighty winds that shape the host galaxies, profoundly influencing how they grow....
  • Vatican pulls top astronomers into its orbit for galaxy conference

    10/04/2007 1:59:00 PM PDT · by NYer · 4 replies · 456+ views
    CNS ^ | October 4, 2007 | Carol Glatz
    ROME (CNS) -- The Vatican Observatory called together some of the world's top astronomers for a major conference on the creation and evolution of disk galaxies in an effort to better understand the nature of the universe. More than 200 men and women from 26 countries attended the Oct. 1-5 conference in Rome to share some of the discoveries since the Vatican's last galaxy conference in 2000. The observatory director, Argentine Jesuit Father Jose Funes, said they were able to attract top scientists and scholars for the meeting because "the Vatican Observatory is a prestigious institute, and the Holy See...
  • 200,000 Elliptical Galaxies Point the Same Way

    08/30/2007 6:47:29 PM PDT · by jbp1 · 122 replies · 2,951+ views
    slashdot.org ^ | 29 aug 2007 | KJ Longo
    I have studied a sample of 200,000 elliptical galaxies with redshifts <0.20 from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) to investigate whether they tend to have their ellipticities aligned along a particular axis. The data show a 13 standard deviation signal for such an alignment. The axis is close to the spiral spin axis found previously and to that of the quadrupole and octopole moments in the WMAP microwave sky survey
  • Black Holes Devour Matter Like Piranhas

    07/25/2007 8:23:36 AM PDT · by Alter Kaker · 14 replies · 723+ views
    Space.com ^ | 24 July 2007 | Ker Than
    Like gluttonous piranhas, supermassive black holes in young galaxy clusters gorge on bountiful gas until little fuel is left, and then they fade away, a new study suggests.Using NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory, astronomers tallied the number of rapidly growing supermassive black holes, called active galactic nuclei, or AGN, in two populations of galaxy clusters. One group consisted of young-looking clusters located very far from Earth, and the other consisted of an older group located closer to us. The results of the survey, detailed in the July 20 issue of The Astrophysical Journal Letters, showed that the more distant, younger clusters...
  • Astronomers Find Farthest Known Galaxies

    07/10/2007 2:52:26 PM PDT · by NormsRevenge · 23 replies · 1,213+ views
    Space.com on Yahoo ^ | 7/10/07 | Robert Roy Britt
    Astronomers have found evidence for the most distant galaxies ever detected. The galaxies are seen as they existed just 500 million years after the birth of the universe. Their light, traversing the cosmos for more than 13 billion years, was seen only because it was distorted in a natural "gravitational lens" created by the gravity-bending mass of a nearer cluster of galaxies. "Gravitational lensing is the magnification of distant sources by foreground structures," explained Caltech astronomer Richard Ellis, who led the international team. "By looking through carefully selected clusters, we have located six star-forming galaxies seen at unprecedented distances, corresponding...
  • New image gives insight into colliding galaxies (Hubble and Antennae galaxies)

    10/17/2006 9:35:22 PM PDT · by NormsRevenge · 8 replies · 613+ views
    Reuters on Yahoo ^ | 10/17/06 | Reuters
    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A seemingly violent collision of two galaxies is in fact a fertile marriage that has birthed billions of new stars, and an image released on Tuesday gives astronomers their best view yet. The new image of the Antennae galaxies allows astronomers working with the orbiting Hubble Space Telescope to distinguish between new stars and the star clusters that form them. Most of these clusters, created in the collision of the two galaxies, will disperse within 10 million years but about 100 of the largest will grow into "globular clusters" -- large groups of stars found in many...
  • Newfound Blob is Biggest Thing in the Universe

    07/30/2006 8:22:20 AM PDT · by Excuse_My_Bellicosity · 58 replies · 2,345+ views
    Space.com ^ | 27 July 2006 | Ker Than
    An enormous amoeba-like structure 200 million light-years wide and made up of galaxies and large bubbles of gas is the largest known object in the universe, scientists say. The galaxies and gas bubbles, called Lyman alpha blobs, are aligned along three curvy filaments that formed about 2 billion years after the universe exploded into existence after the theoretical Big Bang. The filaments were recently seen using the Subaru and Keck telescopes on Mauna Kea. The galaxies within the newly found structure are packed together four times closer than the universe's average. Some of the gas bubbles are up to 400,000...
  • The End of Small Galaxies

    05/22/2006 7:26:49 PM PDT · by KevinDavis · 8 replies · 251+ views
    space.com ^ | 05/22/06 | Sara Goudarzi
    When the universe was young, countless dwarf galaxies formed, heating the universe and preventing the formation of more small galaxies, a new study suggests. The Big Bang, a theoretical beginning to the universe, is thought to have generated lots of hot stuff—electrons and hydrogen and helium ions. The material expanded rapidly. As space expanded, matter cooled, and the electrons and ions formed neutral atoms and absorbed surrounding light. This placed a dark curtain throughout space. The shadowy era is called the Dark Ages.
  • Ongoing Growth: Galaxies Grab Intergalactic Gas

    02/06/2006 5:18:18 PM PST · by KevinDavis · 9 replies · 238+ views
    space.com ^ | 02/06/06 | Ker Than
    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...
  • Strange Setup: Andromeda's Satellite Galaxies All Lined Up

    01/24/2006 6:31:08 PM PST · by KevinDavis · 35 replies · 1,406+ views
    space.com ^ | 01/23/06 | Ker Than
    An unusually high number of galaxies are aligned along a single plane running through the center of the giant Andromeda galaxy. Scientists don’t have a theory to explain why. Galactic cannibalism or dark matter may be responsible, researchers say. The Andromeda galaxy is located at a distance of 2.5 million light-years away and is the nearest spiral galaxy to the Milky Way. Like our own galaxy, Andromeda is surrounded by numerous dwarf galaxy satellites. Many of these satellites are within 1.3 million light-years or less of the galaxy’s main disk. Using the Hubble Space Telescope, Eva Grebel and Andrew Koch...
  • Milky Way's warp caused by interloping galaxies

    01/09/2006 8:54:01 PM PST · by NormsRevenge · 9 replies · 337+ views
    Reuters on Yahoo ^ | 1/9/06 | Deborah Zabarenko
    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Milky Way is warped -- like a bowl, a saddle or the brim of a fedora hat, depending on when you look -- and a pair of interloping galaxies may be to blame, astronomers said on Monday. Earth is in a fairly non-warped neighborhood, because it lies relatively close to the center of the Milky Way's disk, said Leo Blitz of the University of California, Berkeley. But the far-flung reaches of the galaxy could be caught up in a warp of as much as 20,000 light-years. A light-year is about 6 trillion miles, the distance light...
  • Are We A Privileged Planet? - (are we "alone" among billions of galaxies, stars & planets?)

    06/10/2005 8:04:42 PM PDT · by CHARLITE · 108 replies · 2,004+ views
    AMERICAN ENTERPRISE ONLINE.COM ^ | JUNE 10, 2005 | WILLIAM TUCKER
    For a few moments there, “Intelligent Design” seemed to be making headway. Two weeks ago, the Smithsonian announced it would screen the movie, “The Privileged Planet,” produced by the Discovery Institute, at the National Museum of History on June 23rd. The outcry in the New York Times and The Washington Post was immediate. The Smithsonian was caving to religious fundamentalists. “While `The Privileged Planet’ is an extremely sophisticated religious film, it is a religious film nevertheless,” pronounced The Post in an editorial entitled “Dissing Darwin.” Within a week, the Smithsonian had yielded to liberal opinion. It cancelled its “co-sponsorship” of...
  • It Orbits a Star, but Does It Qualify for Planethood?

    04/05/2005 5:17:35 PM PDT · by neverdem · 14 replies · 619+ views
    NY Times ^ | April 5, 2005 | DENNIS OVERBYE
    Astronomers have produced what they say could be the first direct image of a planet around another Sun-like star. But the work has touched off intense debate about whether the orbiting object's mass has been determined accurately enough to count as a planet. At issue is a reddish object that appears to be orbiting GQ Lup, a very young star about 450 light-years from here in the constellation Lupus. In marked contrast to other extrasolar planets that have been detected in recent years racing around in scorching proximity to their home stars, the new planet is 20 times as far...
  • 'Red and dead' galaxies surprise astronomers

    03/12/2005 11:53:27 AM PST · by LibWhacker · 19 replies · 769+ views
    New Scientist ^ | 3/11/05 | Maggie McKee
    The corpses of three "dead" galaxies - which to the surprise of astronomers stopped forming stars long ago - have been identified by the Spitzer Space Telescope during a survey of the distant, early universe. The find bolsters a theory that colossal black holes can starve galaxies of the gas needed to create new stars. An infrared telescope on Earth first found the galaxies two years ago. They appeared red - a sign that most of their stars were old. But our planet's own heat clouded the observations, making it impossible to rule out whether dust was obscuring the light...