For billions of years, the Milky Way’s largest satellite galaxies – the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds – have followed a perilous journey. Orbiting one another as they are pulled in toward our home galaxy, they have begun to unravel, leaving behind trails of gaseous debris. And yet – to the puzzlement of astronomers – these dwarf galaxies remain intact, with ongoing vigorous star formation.
“A lot of people were struggling to
explain how these streams of material could be there,” said Dhanesh Krishnarao,
assistant professor at Colorado College. “If this gas was removed from these
galaxies, how are they still forming stars?”
With the help of data from NASA’s Hubble
Space Telescope and
a retired satellite called the Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer (FUSE), a team of astronomers led by Krishnarao
has finally found the answer: the Magellanic system is surrounded by a corona,
a protective shield of hot supercharged gas. This cocoons the two galaxies,
preventing their gas supplies from being siphoned off by the Milky Way, and
therefore allowing them to continue forming new stars.
Researchers have used spectroscopic observations of ultraviolet light from
quasars to detect and map out the Magellanic Corona, a diffuse halo of hot,
supercharged gas surrounding the Small and Large Magellanic Clouds. Shown here
in purple, the corona stretches more than 100,000 light-years from the main
mass of stars, gas, and dust that make up the Magellanic Clouds, intermingling
with the hotter and more extensive corona that surrounds the Milky Way. The
Magellanic Clouds, dwarf galaxies roughly 160,000 light-years from Earth, are
the largest of the Milky Way’s satellites and are thought to be on their first
in-falling passage around the Milky Way. This journey has begun to unravel what
were once barred spirals with multiple arms into more irregular-shaped galaxies
with long tails of debris. The corona is thought to act as a buffer protecting
the dwarf galaxies’ vital star-forming gas from the gravitational pull of the
much larger Milky Way. The detection of the Magellanic Corona was made by
analyzing patterns in ultraviolet light from 28 distant background quasars. As
the quasar light passes through the corona, certain wavelengths (colors) of
ultraviolet light are absorbed. The quasar spectra become imprinted with the
distinct signatures of carbon, oxygen, and silicon ions that make up the corona
gas. Because each quasar probes a different part of the corona, the research
team was also able to show that the amount of gas decreases with distance from
the center of the Large Magellanic Cloud. This study used archival observations
of quasars from Hubble’s Cosmic Origins Spectrograph (COS) and the Far
Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer (FUSE). Quasars have also been used to probe
the Magellanic Stream, outflows from the Milky Way , and the halo surrounding
the Andromeda Galaxy. Illustration Credits: STScI, Leah Hustak
This discovery, which was just published in Nature, addresses a novel aspect of galaxy evolution. “Galaxies envelope
themselves in gaseous cocoons, which act as defensive shields against other
galaxies,” said co-investigator Andrew Fox of the Space Telescope Science
Institute in Baltimore, Maryland.
Astronomers predicted the corona’s existence several years ago. “We
discovered that if we included a corona in the simulations of the Magellanic
Clouds falling onto the Milky Way, we could explain the mass of extracted gas
for the first time," explained Elena D'Onghia, a co-investigator at the
University of Wisconsin–Madison. “We knew that the Large Magellanic Cloud
should be massive enough to have a corona.”
But although the corona stretches more than 100,000 light-years from the
Magellanic clouds and covers a huge portion of the southern sky, it is
effectively invisible. Mapping it out required scouring through 30 years
of archived data for suitable measurements.
Researchers think that a galaxy’s corona is a remnant of the primordial
cloud of gas that collapsed to form the galaxy billions of years ago. Although
coronas have been seen around more distant dwarf galaxies, astronomers had
never before been able to probe one in as much detail as this.
There’re lots of
predictions from computer simulations about what they should look like, how
they should interact over billions of years, but observationally we can't
really test most of them because dwarf galaxies are typically just too hard to
detect,” said Krishnarao. Because they are right on our doorstep, the
Magellanic Clouds provide an ideal opportunity to study how dwarf galaxies
interact and evolve.
In search of direct evidence of the
Magellanic Corona, the team combed through the Hubble and FUSE archives for
ultraviolet observations of quasars located billions of light-years behind it.
Quasars are the extremely bright cores of galaxies harboring massive active
black holes. The team reasoned that although the corona would be too dim to see
on its own, it should be visible as a sort of fog obscuring and absorbing
distinct patterns of bright light from quasars in the background. Hubble
observations of quasars were used in the past to map the corona
surrounding the Andromeda galaxy.
By analyzing
patterns in
ultraviolet light from 28 quasars, the team was able to detect and characterize
the material surrounding the Large Magellanic Cloud and confirm that the corona
exists. As predicted, the quasar spectra are imprinted with the distinct
signatures of carbon, oxygen, and silicon that make up the halo of hot plasma
that surrounds the galaxy.
The ability to detect the corona required
extremely detailed ultraviolet spectra. “The resolution of Hubble and FUSE were
crucial for this study,” explained Krishnarao. “The corona gas is so diffuse,
it’s barely even there.” In addition, it is mixed with other gases, including
the streams pulled from the Magellanic Clouds and material originating in the
Milky Way.
By mapping the results, the team also
discovered that the amount of gas decreases with distance from the center of
the Large Magellanic Cloud. “It’s a perfect telltale signature that this corona
is really there,” said Krishnarao. “It really is cocooning the galaxy and
protecting it.”
How can such a thin shroud of gas protect
a galaxy from destruction?
“Anything that tries to pass into the
galaxy has to pass through this material first, so it can absorb some of that
impact,” explained Krishnarao. “In addition, the corona is the first material
that can be extracted. While giving up a little bit of the corona, you're
protecting the gas that's inside of the galaxy itself and able to form new stars.”
The Hubble Space Telescope is a project of international cooperation between NASA and ESA (European Space Agency). NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, manages the telescope. The Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) in Baltimore, Maryland, conducts Hubble science operations. STScI is operated for NASA by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy in Washington, D.C.
The Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer (FUSE) was a project of international
cooperation between NASA, CSA (Canadian Space Agency), and CNES (French Space
Agency), and was in operation between 1999 and 2007.
Source: Hubble Detects Protective Shield Defending a Pair of Dwarf Galaxies | NASA
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