The huge halo around giant elliptical galaxy
Messier 87 appears on this very deep image. An excess of light in the
top-right part of this halo, and the motion of planetary nebulae in the
galaxy, are the last remaining signs of a medium-sized galaxy that
recently collided with Messier 87. The image also reveals many other
galaxies forming the Virgo Cluster, of which Messier 87 is the largest
member. In particular, the two galaxies at the top right of the frame
are nicknamed 'the Eyes'.
Credit: Chris Mihos (Case Western Reserve University)/ESO
Astronomers expect that galaxies grow by
swallowing smaller galaxies. But the evidence is usually not easy to see
-- just as the remains of the water thrown from a glass into a pond
will quickly merge with the pond water, the stars in the infalling
galaxy merge in with the very similar stars of the bigger galaxy leaving
no trace.
But now a team of astronomers led by PhD student Alessia Longobardi
at the Max-Planck-Institut für extraterrestrische Physik , Garching,
Germany has applied a clever observational trick to clearly show that
the nearby giant elliptical galaxy Messier 87 merged with a smaller
spiral galaxy in the last billion years.
"This result shows directly that large, luminous structures in the
Universe are still growing in a substantial way -- galaxies are not
finished yet!" says Alessia Longobardi. "A large sector of Messier 87's
outer halo now appears twice as bright as it would if the collision had
not taken place."
Messier 87 lies at the centre of the Virgo Cluster of galaxies. It is
a vast ball of stars with a total mass more than a million million
times that of the Sun, lying about 50 million light-years away.
Rather than try to look at all the stars in Messier 87 -- there are
literally billions and they are too faint and numerous be studied
individually -- the team looked at planetary nebulae, the glowing shells
around ageing stars [1]. Because these objects shine very brightly in a
specific hue of aquamarine green, they can be distinguished from the
surrounding stars. Careful observation of the light from the nebulae
using a powerful spectrograph can also reveal their motions [2].
Just as the water from a glass is not visible once thrown into the
pond -- but may have caused ripples and other disturbances that can be
seen if there are particles of mud in the water -- the motions of the
planetary nebulae, measured using the FLAMES spectrograph on the Very
Large Telescope , provide clues to the past merger.
"We are witnessing a single recent accretion event where a
medium-sized galaxy fell through the centre of Messier 87, and as a
consequence of the enormous gravitational tidal forces, its stars are
now scattered over a region that is 100 times larger than the original
galaxy!" adds Ortwin Gerhard, head of the dynamics group at the
Max-Planck-Institut für extraterrestrische Physik, Garching, Germany,
and a co-author of the new study.
The team also looked very carefully at the light distribution in the
outer parts of Messier 87 and found evidence of extra light coming from
the stars in the galaxy that had been pulled in and disrupted. These
observations have also shown that the disrupted galaxy has added
younger, bluer stars to Messier 87, and so it was probably a
star-forming spiral galaxy before its merger.
"It is very exciting to be able to identify stars that have been
scattered around hundreds of thousands of light-years in the halo of
this galaxy -- but still to be able to see from their velocities that
they belong to a common structure. The green planetary nebulae are the
needles in a haystack of golden stars. But these rare needles hold the
clues to what happened to the stars," concludes co-author Magda
Arnaboldi (ESO, Garching, Germany).
Notes
[1] Planetary nebulae form as Sun-like stars reach the ends of their
lives, and they emit a large fraction of their energy in just a few
spectral lines, the brightest of which is in the green part of the
spectrum. Because of this, they are the only single stars whose motions
can be measured at Messier 87's distance of 50 million light-years from
Earth. They behave like beacons of green light and as such they tell us
where they are and at what velocity they are travelling.
[2] These planetary nebulae are still very faint and need the full
power of the Very Large Telescope to study them: the light emitted by a
typical planetary nebula in the halo of the Messier 87 galaxy is
equivalent to two 60-watt light bulbs on Venus as seen from Earth.
The motions of the planetary nebulae along the line of sight towards
or away from Earth lead to shifts in the spectral lines, as a result of
the Doppler effect. These shifts can be measured accurately using a
sensitive spectrograph and the velocity of the nebulae deduced.
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