PRESS RELEASE
Date Released: Wednesday, June 18, 2003
Source: Discovery.com
The universe just became a little simpler
Artist's impression of two black holes evacuating the center of a
galaxy. Credit: Gabriel Perez Diaz;; MultiMedia Service;; Instituto de
Astrof�sica de Canarias (IAC). (jpg 182.88kb)
Using images from the
Hubble Space Telescope, astronomers have concluded that two of the most
common types of galaxies in the universe are in reality different
versions of the same thing.���In spite of their similar-sounding names,
astronomers had long considered "dwarf elliptical" and "giant
elliptical" galaxies to be distinct objects. The new findings, which
appear in this month?s edition of The Astronomical Journal,
fundamentally alter astronomers? understanding of these important
components of the universe.
Galaxies, the building
blocks of the visible universe, are enormous systems of stars bound
together by gravity and scattered throughout space. There are several
different types, or shapes. For example, the Milky Way galaxy, in which
the Earth resides, is a "spiral" galaxy, so named because its disk-like
shape has an embedded spiral arm pattern. Other galaxies are known as
"irregular" galaxies because they do not have distinct shapes. But
together, dwarf and giant elliptical galaxies are the most common.
For the past two decades,
astronomers have considered giant elliptical galaxies, which contain
hundreds of billions of stars, and dwarf elliptical galaxies, which
typically contain less than one billion stars, as completely separate
systems. In many ways it was a natural distinction: not only do giant
elliptical galaxies contain more stars, but the stars are more closely
packed toward the centers of such galaxies. In other words, the overall
distribution of stars appeared to be fundamentally different.
Alister Graham and Rafael
Guzm�n from the University of Florida decided to take a second look at
the accepted wisdom. Expanding on work started by Graham at the
Instituto de Astrof�sica de Canarias (IAC) in Spain, the pair analyzed
images of dwarf elliptical galaxies taken by the Hubble Space Telescope
and combined their results with previously collected data on over 200
galaxies. The resulting sample revealed distributions of stars
displaying a continuous variety of structures between the allegedly
different dwarf and giant galaxy classes - in other words, these two
types were just relatively extreme versions of the same object.
Moreover, there was one rather interesting caveat.
In recent years, Graham
said, a number of studies had revealed that the innermost centers of
giant elliptical galaxies - the inner 1 percent - had been scoured out
or emptied of stars. Astronomers suspect that massive black holes are
responsible, gravitationally hurling away any stars that ventured too
near and devouring the stars that came in really close. This scouring
phenomenon had tended to dim the centers of giant elliptical galaxies,
which ran counter to the trend that bigger galaxies tend to have
brighter centers. The dimming phenomenon was one reason astronomers had
concluded dwarf and giant galaxies must be different types.
Together with Ignacio
Trujillo of the Max-Planck Institut f�r Astronomie in Germany and Peter
Erwin and Andres Asensio Ramos of the IAC, Graham addresses this
phenomenon in a separate article that appears in the same issue of The
Astronomical Journal. Building on recent revelations showing a strong
connection between the mass of the central black holes and the
properties of their host galaxies, Graham and his colleagues introduced
a new mathematical model that simultaneously describes the distribution
of stars in the inner and outer parts of the galaxy. "It was only after
allowing for the modification of the cores by the black holes that we
were able to fully unify the dwarf and giant galaxy population," Graham
said.
"This helps to simplify the
universe slightly because we can replace two distinct galaxy types with
one," said Graham. "But the implications go beyond mere astronomical
taxonomy. Astronomers had thought the formation mechanisms for these
objects must be different, but instead there must be a unifying
construction process."
Sidney van den Bergh,
former director and researcher emeritus at the Dominion Astrophysical
Observatory at the National Research Council of Canada in Victoria,
said Graham and Guzm�n?s result puts to rest a "very puzzling"
question.
"In astronomy, like in
physical anthropology, there is a deep connection between the
classification of species and their evolutionary connections," van den
Bergh said. "The bottom line is that the new work of Graham and Guzm�n
has made life a little bit simpler for those of us who want to
understand how galaxies are formed and have evolved." �
Notes for editor
A Spanish version of this Press Release can be found at
http://www.iac.es/gabinete/noticias/2003/m06d16.htm
Alister Graham is presently working at the University of Florida:
graham@astro.ufl.edu
�
Peer reviewed publication and references
The Astronomical Journal, 2003, vol 125, p.2936
and
The Astronomical Journal, 2003, vol 125, p.2951
�
Reference URL : http://www.iac.es/gabinete/noticias/2003/m06d16.htm
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