The low-surface-brightness galaxy CDG-2, within the
dashed red circle at right, is dominated by dark matter and contains only a
sparse scattering of stars. The full image from NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope
is at left.
NASA, ESA, Dayi Li (UToronto); Image Processing: Joseph DePasquale (STScI)
In the vast tapestry of the universe, most galaxies shine brightly across cosmic time and space. Yet a rare class of galaxies remains nearly invisible — low-surface-brightness galaxies dominated by dark matter and containing only a sparse scattering of faint stars.
One such elusive object, dubbed CDG-2, may be among the most heavily dark matter-dominated galaxies ever discovered. (Dark matter is an invisible form of matter that does not reflect, emit, or absorb light.) The science paper detailing this finding was published in The Astrophysical Journal Letters.
Detecting such faint galaxies is extraordinarily difficult. Using advanced statistical techniques, David Li of the University of Toronto, Canada, and his team identified 10 previously confirmed low-surface-brightness galaxies and two additional dark galaxy candidates by searching for tight groupings of globular clusters — compact, spherical star groups typically found orbiting normal galaxies. These clusters can signal the presence of a faint, hidden stellar population.
To confirm one of the dark galaxy candidates, astronomers employed a trio of observatories: NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope, ESA’s (European Space Agency) Euclid space observatory, and the ground-based Subaru Telescope in Hawaii. Hubble’s high-resolution imaging revealed a close collection of four globular clusters in the Perseus galaxy cluster, 300 million light-years away. Follow-up studies using Hubble, Euclid, and Subaru data then revealed a faint, diffuse glow surrounding the star clusters — strong evidence of an underlying galaxy.
“This is the first galaxy detected solely through its globular cluster population,” said Li. “Under conservative assumptions, the four clusters represent the entire globular cluster population of CDG-2.”
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center; Lead Producer: Paul Morris
Preliminary analysis suggests CDG-2 has
the luminosity of roughly 6 million Sun-like stars, with the globular clusters
accounting for 16% of its visible content. Remarkably, 99% of its mass, which
includes both visible matter and dark matter, appears to be dark matter. Much
of its normal matter to enable star formation — primarily hydrogen gas — was
likely stripped away by gravitational interactions with other galaxies inside
the Perseus cluster.
Globular clusters possess immense
stellar density and are gravitationally tightly bound. This makes the clusters
more resistant to gravitational tidal disruption, and therefore reliable
tracers of such ghostly galaxies.
As sky surveys expand with missions like
Euclid, NASA’s upcoming Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope, and the Vera C. Rubin Observatory, astronomers are increasingly turning to machine learning and
statistical methods to sift through vast datasets.
Source: NASA’s Hubble Identifies One of Darkest Known Galaxies - NASA Science

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