Dwarf Galaxies Orbiting Andromeda Baffle Scientists -- "Like Some Pre-existing Structure has been Sucked In"
A fascinating discovery about dwarf galaxies orbiting the Andromeda galaxy suggests that conventional ideas regarding the formation of galaxies like our own Milky Way are missing something fundamental. A string of 13 dwarf galaxies in orbit around the massive galaxy Andromeda are spread across a flat plane more than one million light years wide and only 30,000 light years thick, moving in synchronicity with one another, according to University of Victoria astronomer Julio Navarro, one of the co-authors of an article on the phenomenon in the latest edition of the journal Nature. The dwarfs are spread across a distance so vast that they have yet to complete a single orbit.
In a paper published in the journal Nature, an international team of astronomers described the discovery that almost half of the 30 dwarf galaxies orbiting Andromeda do so in an enormous plane more than a million light years in diameter, but only 30,000 light years thick. The findings defied scientists’ expectation—based on two decades of computer modeling—that satellite galaxies would orbit in independent, seemingly random patterns. Instead, many of these dwarf galaxies seem to share a common orbit, an observation that currently has no explanation.
“It’s a very unusual, unexpected configuration,” says UVic astrophysicist Dr. Julio Navarro, a co-author of the paper. “It’s so unexpected that we don’t know yet what it’s telling us. The fact that it is there at all is pointing us toward something profound. Somehow, they have a plane-like structure similar to a solar system, but with a completely different origin and we don’t know what that origin is,” Navarro said. Understanding how and why the dwarf galaxies form the ring around Andromeda is expected to offer new information on the formation of all galaxies.
Twelve of the 13 dwarf galaxies — they range in size from 10 million to 100 million stars — are on one side of the orbital plane, as if they are held by a string being swung from Andromeda.
“This looks like they are all moving together and they all know where to go, like some pre-existing structure has been sucked in by Andromeda,” Navarro said.
The paper is based on data collected for a project led by UVic professor Alan McConnachie of the Herzberg Institute of Astrophysics in Saanich.
The Daily Galaxy via University of Victoria and Nature
Image Credit top of page: http://www.washington.edu/news/2012/12/04/crowdsourcing-the-cosmos-astronomers-welcome-all-to-identify-star-clusters-in-andromeda-galaxy/
Comments
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Is it possible that this pre-existing structure is exactly what it looks like? A disassembled galaxy. A mature galaxy that lost is gravatational connection to the AGN and wandered?
Posted by: katesisco | March 19, 2013 at 09:11 AM
Given the huge distances involved I believe it would be unlikely that this pre-existing structure was a galaxy. I wounder if this pre-existing structure was the original distribution of the material which formed these galaxies and maybe galaxy mergings are not as important to galaxy evolution as we thought.
Posted by: TheDude | March 19, 2013 at 02:50 PM
Researchers have no idea about the formation of dwarf galaxies. T%his just shows how ignorant we are about the universe.
Posted by: Peter Smitt | March 19, 2013 at 05:17 PM
Sorry, meant to say that researchers believe they have found a huge hole in science's understanding of galaxy formation.
Posted by: Peter Smitt | March 19, 2013 at 06:07 PM
"Like Some Pre-existing Structure has been Sucked In"
"Twelve of the 13 dwarf galaxies — they range in size from 10 million to 100 million stars — are on one side of the orbital plane, as if they are held by a string being swung from Andromeda."
I guess, this datum indicates that a smaller galaxy group (group of dwarf ones) has been mingled with Andromeda in the past.
Posted by: yas | March 20, 2013 at 07:49 PM
I am really fed up about baffled astronomers... Why dont they just face the plain true? The standard model is WRONG... This is not science anymore nowadays its all about politics it really sucks.
Posted by: Roberto d. | March 21, 2013 at 02:39 AM
What do you mean Roberto? If astronomers weren't baffled they wouldn't be doing their job correctly!
Posted by: David | March 23, 2013 at 09:58 AM