Yahoo – AFP,
Marlowe HOOD, October 31, 2018
Paris (AFP) - The Milky Way's signature halo is mostly stellar rubble from a cosmic collision 10 billion years ago with another galaxy a quarter of its size, scientists stunned by their own discovery reported Wednesday.
Paris (AFP) - The Milky Way's signature halo is mostly stellar rubble from a cosmic collision 10 billion years ago with another galaxy a quarter of its size, scientists stunned by their own discovery reported Wednesday.
The
slow-motion crash with Gaia-Enceladus -- named after the giant of Greek
mythology born of Earth and Sky -- not only provided the halo's raw material,
equivalent to 600 million Suns, it also filled out our galaxy's distinctive
disk, they reported in the journal Nature.
"We
have basically unravelled the formation of the Milky Way," lead author
Amina Helmi, an astronomer at the University of Groningen's Kapteyn
Astronomical Institute, told AFP.
"The
merger led to what we now call the halo of our galaxy, and -- because it was so
massive -- to the puffing up of the disk that was already present at the
time."
"We
didn't expect to find that most halo stars have a shared origin," she
added.
Large
galaxies get that way by absorbing lesser ones.
But
astronomers have long argued as to whether the Milky Way bulked up on a diet of
baby star clusters, or by merging with a single Big One.
Until this
year, theories from either camp were supported mostly by thin reeds of
speculative inference.
But that
all changed with a massive data dump in April from the Gaia satellite mission.
Put into
orbit by the European Space Agency in 2013, Gaia has produced an unprecedented
3-D mapping of 1.7 billion stars, including more than a billion -- one percent
of the total -- in the Milky Way.
Repeated
measurements by the satellite make it possible to calculate precise distances,
and the velocities with which each star is streaking through the Universe.
Crashing
galaxies on rewind
Looking for
traces of galactic mergers with the Milky Way's halo, the researchers found to
their surprise that most of its stars were from the same immediate family.
"The
chemical signature was clearly different from the 'native' Milky Way
stars," Helmi said.
"And
they are a fairly homogenous group, which indicates they share a common
origin."
Adding in
measurements across the light spectrum, the researchers were able to
reconstruct in three dimensions the precise motions of the invading stars over
time.
"Playing
these videos backwards allows astronomers to study how our galaxy was
assembled, and how it has evolved," noted Kim Venn, an astronomer at the
University of Victoria in Canada, commenting on the study.
Helmi and
colleagues calculated that the merger occurred 10 billion years ago, some 3.8
billion years after the Big Bang jump-started the Universe into existence.
The team
named the galaxy that melded with the Milky Way Enceladus -- progeny of Gaia,
goddess of Earth, and Uranus, god of the sky -- because the giant was said to
have caused earthquakes after being buried under Mount Etna, much in the way
the rogue galaxy unsettled and resculpted the Milky Way.
The Gaia
satellite gathers data on 100,000 stars per minute, taking some 500 million
measurements per day. Its first map was published in September 2016, based on a
year's worth of observations of about 1.15 billion stars.
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