SKY & TELESCOPE:
Ancient Spiral Galaxy Discovered
An ancient spiral galaxy offers another tantalizing clue to how nature might create these grand designs.
An
artist's illustration of the grand design spiral BX442 that lives in a
universe only 3 billions years old. The close passage of the dwarf
companion galaxy to the upper left may have triggered the formation of
spiral arms.
Dunlap Institute for Astronomy & Astrophysics / Joe Bergeron
Take a look through your telescope at our local universe, and you’ll
find lots of beautiful, grand-design spirals. Messier objects M51, M81,
and M101 all come to mind — perhaps M101 especially because of the
supernova that exploded there last year.
But if your telescope reached a bit further than our cosmic backyard,
you would find that these elegant spiral disks gradually give way to
clumpy, irregularly shaped galaxies. So when astronomers found a
grand-design spiral gleaming from the universe when it was only 3
billion years old, they were pleasantly shocked.
Despite its
great distance, the spiral design of the galaxy Q2343-BX442 is clear in
observations by the Hubble Space Telescope and the Keck II Telescope in
Hawaii. Measurements made with Keck’s OSIRIS spectrograph confirm that
the arms are indeed rotating around a central bulge, so the apparent
spiral shape doesn’t result from a chance alignment of two disk-shaped
galaxies, the study’s authors conclude in the
July 19th Nature.
By
all appearances, BX442 is a pretty normal galaxy. With a diameter of
52,000 light-years, the spiral is roughly half the size of the Milky
Way. The arms churn out stars at a rate 30 times higher than our
galaxy’s neighbors, but these high rates are comparable to other
star-forming clumps in the ancient universe.
The
artist's illustration above is based on this false-color image of
BX442, which combines observations taken by the Hubble Space Telescope
and the Keck Observatory in Hawaii. (The real image is slightly tilted
compared to the artist's illustration.)
David Law / Dunlap Insitute for Astronomy & Astrophysics
The only thing that’s not normal about BX442 is the fact that it
exists. The galaxy is the only one with a regular spiral shape out of
306 galaxies the team examined with Hubble, all of which lie a similar
distance away. Astronomers think spiral patterns are rare in the early
universe because newly formed galaxies tend to be turbulent and
therefore unfriendly to organized structure. Many of a galaxy’s stars
will circle the nucleus in well-behaved elliptical orbits, but other
stars will follow random paths that don’t match the galaxy’s overall
rotation. As a result, the galaxy becomes “puffy,” making it difficult
to shepherd the stars and gas into a spiral pattern.
But BX442
is
puffy, the Keck spectroscopic observations reveal. So how did the
fluffy galaxy arrange its gas and stars into such sweeping spiral arms?
Based on computer simulations, the authors suggest that the
gravitational pull of a passing dwarf galaxy (seen to the upper left of
BX442 in the image) may have disrupted the galaxy in just the right way
to form the spiral pattern. The catch is that the spirality is therefore
short-lived, lasting less than 100 million years in the simulation,
which might explain why spirals are so hard to find in the early
universe.
A galaxy’s disk must be relatively stable to start with
if you want to make a spiral, says James Bullock (University of
California, Irvine), an expert in galaxy evolution not involved in the
study. Last year, Bullock and his colleagues suggested that the
Milky Way’s spiral structure
might result from its interaction with the Sagittarius dwarf galaxy.
Stable galaxies that interact with a neighbor in just the right way to
form spiral arms are exceptional in the early universe, he says. “Law
and his colleagues seem to have found one of these rare gems!”
Posted by Monica Young, July 18, 2012 (SkyandTelescope.com)
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