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Photographs of Dr. Keel can be found at www.astr.ua.edu/keel.
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – Trailing 200,000-light-year-long streamers
of seething gas, a galaxy that was once like our Milky Way is being
shredded as it plunges at 4.5 million miles per hour through the
heart of a distant cluster of galaxies. In this unusually violent
collision with ambient cluster gas, the galaxy is stripped down
to its skeletal spiral arms as it is eviscerated of fresh hydrogen
for making new stars.
The galaxy's untimely demise is offering new clues to solving the
mystery of what happens to spiral galaxies in a violent universe.
Views of the early universe show that spiral galaxies were once
much more abundant in rich clusters of galaxies. But they seem to
have been vanishing over cosmic time. Where have these "missing
bodies" gone?
Astronomers are using a wide range of telescopes and analysis techniques
to conduct a "CSI" or Crime Scene Investigator-style look
at what is happening to this galaxy inside its cluster's rough neighborhood.
“It's a clear case of galaxy assault and battery,” says
Dr. William Keel, professor of astronomy at The University of Alabama.
“This is the first time we have a full suite of results from
such disparate techniques showing the crime being committed, and
the modus operandi.”
Keel and colleagues are laying out the "forensic evidence"
of the galaxy's late life, in a series of presentations today
in Atlanta at the 203rd meeting of the American Astronomical Society.
Astronomers have assembled the evidence by combining a variety
of diagnostic observations from telescopes analyzing the galaxy's
appearance in X-ray, optical, and radio light. Parallel observations
at different wavelengths trace how stars, gas and dust are being
tossed around and torn from the fragile galaxy, called C153.
Though such "distressed" galaxies have been seen before,
this one's demise is unusually swift and violent. The galaxy belongs
to a cluster of galaxies that slammed into another cluster about
100 million years ago. This galaxy took the brunt of the beating
as it fell along a trajectory straight through the dense core of
the colliding cluster.
“This helps explain the weird X-ray and radio emissions we
see,” says Keel. “The galaxy is a laboratory for studying
how gas can be stripped away when it flies through the hot cluster
gas, shutting down star birth and transforming the galaxy.”
The first suggestion of galactic mayhem in this cluster came in
1994 when the Very Large Array radio telescope near Socorro, N.M.,
detected an unusual number of radio galaxies in the cluster, called
Abell 2125. Radio sources trace both star formation and the feeding
of central black holes in galaxy clusters. The radio observations
also showed that C153 stood out from the other galaxies as an exceptionally
powerful radio source.
Keel's team began an extensive program of further observations
to uncover details about the galaxies. “This was designed
to see what the connection could possibly be between events on the
10-million-light-year scale of the cluster merger and what happens
deep inside individual galaxies,” says Keel.
X-ray observations from the ROSAT satellite (an acronym for the
Roentgen Satellite) demonstrated that the cluster contains vast
amounts of 36-million-degree Fahrenheit (20-million-degree Kelvin)
gas that envelops the galaxies. The gas is concentrated into two
main lumps rather than smoothly distributed across the cluster,
as is more commonly the case.
This bolstered the suspicion that two galaxy clusters are actually
colliding. In the mid-to-late 1990s astronomers turned the Mayall
4-meter telescope and the WIYN 3.5-meter telescope at the Kitt Peak
National Observatory on the cluster to analyze the starlight via
spectroscopy. They found many star-forming systems and even active
galactic black holes fueled by the collision. The disintegrating
galaxy C153 stood out dramatically when the KPNO telescopes were
used to photomap the cluster in color.
Astronomers then trained NASA's Hubble Space Telescope (HST) onto
C153 and resolved a bizarre shape. They found that the galaxy looks
unusually clumpy with many young star clusters and chaotic dust
features. Besides the disrupted features in the galaxy's disk, HST
also showed that the light in the tail is mostly attributed to recent
star formation, providing a direct link to the stripping of the
galaxy as it passed through the cluster core. Gas compressed along
the galaxy's leading edge, like snow before a plow, ignited a firestorm
of new star birth.
Evidence of recent star formation also comes from the optical spectrum
obtained at the 10-meter Gemini North telescope in Hawaii. The spectrum
allows the researchers to estimate the time since the most recent
burst of star formation.
This conclusion was further bolstered when the Mosaic camera on
Kitt Peak's Mayall telescope found a very long tail of extended
gas coming off the galaxy. The tail was apparently generated in
part by a hurricane of stellar winds boiling off the new star-birth
regions and being blown backwards as the galaxy streaks through
the surrounding hot gas of the cluster.
Spectroscopic observations with the Gemini telescope allowed astronomers
to age-date the starburst. They find that 90 percent of C153's blue
light is from a population of stars that are 100 million years old.
This age corresponds to the time the galaxy should have gone careening
through the densest gas in the cluster core.
The Gemini spectroscopic observations show the stars are in a regular
pattern of orbital motion around the center, as usual for disk galaxies.
However, there are multiple widespread clouds of gas moving independently
of the stars. “This is an important clue that something beyond
gravitational forces must be at work, since stars and gas respond
the same way to purely gravitational forces,” says Keel. “In
other words, the galaxy's gas doesn't know what the stars are doing.”
NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory discovered that the cooler clouds,
detected with optical telescopes and an associated radio feature,
are embedded in a much larger multimillion-degree trail of gas.
Chandra's data indicate that this hot gas was probably enriched
in heavy elements by the starburst and driven out of the galaxy
by its supersonic motion through the much larger cloud of gas that
pervades the cluster.
Collectively, these observations offer evidence that the ram pressure
of external gas in the cluster is stripping away the galaxy's own
gas. This process has long been hypothesized to account for the
forced evolution of cluster galaxies. Its aftermath has been seen
in several ways. Some nearby examples, Seyfert's Sextet and Stefan's
Quintet, are tight clusters that show the aftermath of high-velocity
collisions.
The galaxy C153 is destined to lose the last vestiges of its spiral
arms and become a bland S0-type galaxy having a central bulge and
disk, but no spiral-arm structure. These types of galaxies are common
in the dense galaxy clusters seen today. Astronomers plan to make
new observations with Gemini again in 2004 to study the dynamics
of the gas and stars in the tail.
In addition to Keel, the science team members are Frazer Owen (National
Radio Astronomy Observatory), Michael Ledlow (Gemini Observatory),
and Daniel Wang (University of Massachusetts).
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