Today.Az » Weird / Interesting » Twisted tale of our galaxy's ring: Strange kink in Milky Way
20 July 2011 [20:20] - Today.Az
New observations from the Herschel Space Observatory show a bizarre, twisted ring of dense gas at the center of our Milky Way galaxy. Only a few portions of the ring, which stretches across more than 600 light-years, were known before. Herschel's view reveals the entire ring for the first time, and a strange kink that has astronomers scratching their heads.
"We have looked at this region at the center of the Milky Way many
times before in the infrared," said Alberto Noriega-Crespo of NASA's
Infrared Processing and Analysis Center at the California Institute of
Technology in Pasadena. "But when we looked at the high-resolution
images using Herschel's sub-millimeter wavelengths, the presence of a
ring is quite clear." Noriega-Crespo is co-author of a new paper on the
ring published in a recent issue of Astrophysical Journal Letters.
The Herschel Space Observatory is a European Space Agency-led mission
with important NASA contributions. It sees infrared and sub-millimeter
light, which can readily penetrate through the dust hovering between the
bustling center of our galaxy and us. Herschel's detectors are also
suited to see the coldest stuff in our galaxy.
When astronomers turned the giant telescope to look at the center of
our galaxy, it captured unprecedented views of its inner ring -- a dense
tube of cold gas mixed with dust, where new stars are forming.
Astronomers were shocked by what they saw -- the ring, which is in
the plane of our galaxy, looked more like an infinity symbol with two
lobes pointing to the side. In fact, they later determined the ring was
torqued in the middle, so it only appears to have two lobes. To picture
the structure, imagine holding a stiff, elliptical band and twisting the
ends in opposite directions, so that one side comes up a bit.
"This is what is so exciting about launching a new space telescope
like Herschel," said Sergio Molinari of the Institute of Space Physics
in Rome, Italy, lead author of the new paper. "We have a new and
exciting mystery on our hands, right at the center of our own galaxy."
Observations with the ground-based Nobeyama Radio Observatory in
Japan complemented the Herschel results by determining the velocity of
the denser gas in the ring. The radio results demonstrate that the ring
is moving together as a unit, at the same speed relative to the rest of
the galaxy.
The ring lies at the center of our Milky Way's bar -- a bar-shaped
region of stars at the center of its spidery spiral arms. This bar is
actually inside an even larger ring. Other galaxies have similar bars
and rings. A classic example of a ring inside a bar is in the galaxy NGC
1097, imaged here by NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope. The ring glows
brightly in the center of the galaxy's large bar structure. It is not
known if that ring has a kink or not.
The details of how bars and rings form in spiral galaxies are not
well understood, but computer simulations demonstrate how gravitational
interactions can produce the structures. Some theories hold that bars
arise out of gravitational interactions between galaxies. For example,
the bar at the center of our Milky Way might have been influenced by our
largest neighbor galaxy, Andromeda.
The twist in the ring is not the only mystery to come out of the new
Herschel observations. Astronomers say that the center of the torqued
portion of the ring is not where the center of the galaxy is thought to
be, but slightly offset. The center of our galaxy is considered to be
around "Sagittarius A*," where a massive black hole lies. According to
Noriega-Crespo, it's not clear why the center of the ring doesn't match
up with the assumed center of our galaxy. "There's still so much about
our galaxy to discover," he said. Herschel is a European Space Agency cornerstone mission, with science
instruments provided by consortia of European institutes and with
important participation by NASA. NASA's Herschel Project Office is based
at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. JPL contributed
mission-enabling technology for two of Herschel's three science
instruments. The NASA Herschel Science Center, part of the Infrared
Processing and Analysis Center at the California Institute of Technology
in Pasadena, supports the United States astronomical community. Caltech
manages JPL for NASA.
/Science Daily/
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