X-ray: NASA/CXC/Xiamen Univ./C. Ge; Optical: DESI collaboration; Image Processing: NASA/CXC/SAO/N. Wolk
Astronomers using NASA’s Chandra X-ray
Observatory have found a galaxy
cluster has two
streams of superheated gas crossing one another. This result shows that
crossing the streams may lead to the creation of new structure.
Researchers have discovered an
enormous, comet-like tail of hot gas — spanning over 1.6 million light-years long — trailing behind a galaxy within the galaxy cluster called Zwicky 8338 (Z8338 for short). This
tail, spawned as the galaxy had some of its gas stripped off by the hot gas it
is hurtling through, has split into two streams.
This is the second pair of tails
trailing behind a galaxy in this system. Previously, astronomers discovered a
shorter pair of tails from a different galaxy near this latest one. This newer
and longer set of tails was only seen because of a deeper observation with
Chandra that revealed the fainter X-rays.
Researchers have discovered a second pair of tails
trailing behind a galaxy in this cluster. Previously, astronomers discovered a
shorter pair of tails from a different galaxy close to this latest one. This
newer and longer set of tails was only seen because of a deeper observation
with Chandra that revealed the fainter X-rays that have been shown in the
optical data. These tails span for over a million light-years and help
determine the evolution of the galaxy cluster.
X-ray: NASA/CXC/Xiamen Univ./C. Ge; Optical: DESI
collaboration; Image Processing: NASA/CXC/SAO/N. Wolk
Astronomers now have evidence that these streams trailing behind the
speeding galaxies have crossed one another. Z8338 is a chaotic landscape of
galaxies, superheated gas, and shock waves (akin to sonic booms created by
supersonic jets) in one relatively small region of space. These galaxies are in
motion because they were part of two galaxy clusters that collided with each
other to create Z8338.
This new composite image shows this
spectacle. X-rays from Chandra (represented in purple) outline the
multimillion-degree gas that outweighs all of the galaxies in the cluster. The
Chandra data also shows where this gas has been jettisoned behind the moving
galaxies. Meanwhile an optical image from the Dark Energy Survey from the Cerro
Tololo Inter-American Observatory in Chile shows the individual galaxies
peppered throughout the same field of view.
The original gas tail discovered in
Z8338 is about 800,000 light-years long and is seen as vertical in this image (see the
labeled version). The researchers think the gas in this tail is being stripped away from a
large galaxy as it travels through the galaxy cluster. The head of the tail is
a cloud of relatively cool gas about 100,000 light-years away from the galaxy
it was stripped from. This tail is also separated into two parts.
The team proposes that the
detachment of the tail from the large galaxy may have been caused by the
passage of the other, longer tail. Under this scenario, the tail detached from
the galaxy because of the crossing of the streams.
The results give useful information
about the detachment and destruction of clouds of cooler gas like those seen in
the head of the detached tail. This work shows that the cloud can survive for
at least 30 million years after it is detached. During that time, a new
generation of stars and planets may form within it.
The Z8338 galaxy cluster and its
jumble of galactic streams are located about 670 million light-years from
Earth. A paper describing these results appeared in the Aug. 8, 2023, issue of
the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society and is available online
at: https://academic.oup.com/mnras/article/525/1/1365/7239302.
NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center
manages the Chandra program. The Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory’s
Chandra X-ray Center controls science operations from Cambridge, Massachusetts,
and flight operations from Burlington, Massachusetts.
Read
more from NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory.
Learn more about the Chandra X-ray Observatory and its mission here: https://www.nasa.gov/chandra https://chandra.si.edu
Visual Description:
This release features a composite
image of two pairs of hot gas tails found inside a single galaxy cluster. The
image is presented both labeled and unlabeled, with color-coded ovals
encircling the hot gas tails.
In both the labeled and unlabeled
versions of the image, mottled purple gas speckles a region of space dotted
with distant flecks of red and white. Also present in this region of space are
several glowing golden dots. These dots are individual galaxies that together
form the cluster Zwicky 8338.
To our right of center is a glowing
golden galaxy with a mottled V shaped cloud of purple above it. Yellow labels
identify the two arms of the V as tails trailing behind the hurtling galaxy
below.
To our left of center is another golden galaxy, this one surrounded by purple gas. Behind it, opening toward our right in the shape of a widening V lying on its side, are two more mottled purple clouds. Labeled in white, these newly-discovered gas tails are even larger than the previously discovered tails labeled in yellow. These tails, which overlap with the galaxy on our right, are over 1.6 million light-years long.
By: Lee Mohon
Source: NASA's Chandra Finds Galaxy Cluster That Crosses the Streams - NASA
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