SKY & TELESCOPE:
New Heavyweight Galaxy Cluster
But view the same cluster with X-ray vision, and you’ll mostly see a huge, glowing blob. You’re seeing extremely thin, superheated plasma filling the space between galaxies. As you might expect, the multimillion-degree plasma is densest near the cluster’s middle, where it’s compressed under its own weight. This superhot gas radiates heat away with intense X-rays, so it ought to cool quickly. The densest gas in the core should cool the quickest, followed by thinner gas from the edges of the cluster.
A paper published in Nature today describes observations of one of the most massive galaxy clusters discovered to date. The cluster SPT–CLJ2344-4243, nicknamed Phoenix for its constellation (and pronounceability), weighs in at roughly 2 million billion times the mass of our Sun, or a couple thousand Milky Ways, putting it in competition with heavyweight champion El Gordo. The cluster is almost as young as El Gordo too — its light took 5.7 billion years to arrive at Earth, meaning we see it back when the universe was only 8 billion years old. But the Phoenix’s crowning jewel is the bright ultraviolet light radiating from its core, emitted from newborn stars forming at the prodigious rate of 740 solar masses per year.
With such a high star formation rate, “this is clearly an extreme object,” says Chis O’Dea (RIT), who was not involved in the study.
There’s only one problem: expectations of cluster behavior have changed. To explain the rarity of cooling flows and central star formation in other galaxy clusters, astronomers had to come up with a theory — something must be reheating the gas. And a likely culprit is the supergiant galaxy, often more than 1 million light-years across, that reigns over the center of most large clusters. In the extra-big galaxy’s heart lurks an extra-big supermassive black hole. If jets stream out from the black hole and heat the gas, blowing gigantic bubbles in the process, that would make the gas too hot to form stars effectively.
So if the Phoenix cluster’s core is churning out stars, then it must be going through a brief period where jets from the supermassive black hole haven’t been “on” long enough to reheat the cooling gas.
“We suspect that this strong cooling/star formation episode will only last for around 100 million years, or roughly 1% of the cluster’s lifetime,” says Michael McDonald (MIT), the study’s lead author. “So, even if this short-lived phase is ubiquitous, we still shouldn’t see it in many clusters.”
“Further observations of the cold gas reservoir from which stars are formed will be very important,” suggests Andrew Fabian (University of Cambridge), who was not involved in the study. For example, telescopes such as ALMA could determine how much fuel exists for star formation.
“It will be exciting if similar objects at even higher redshifts are found,” Fabian adds.
Posted by Monica Young, August 15, 2012
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