BEIJING, Jan. 10 (Xinhuanet) -- Astronomers using the Mayall Telescope at Kitt Peak and the DEIMOS spectrograph on the Keck Telescope in Hawaii have discovered evidence that suggests the Andromeda galaxy -- Earth's nearest galactic neighbor -- might be up to five times larger than previously thought.
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The discovery of several large, metal-poor stars located far from the center of the Andromeda galaxy suggests our nearest galactic neighbor might be up to five times larger than previously thought. (File Photo) Photo Gallery >>> | The evidence is the presence of several large,
metal-poor, massive stars known as red giants that are far from the center of
the galaxy.
Although far beyond the most visible portion of the
galaxy -- its swirling disk -- the behemoth, bloated stars are gravitationally
bound to the galaxy and are part of its extended "halo."
"We're typically used to thinking of Andromeda as
this tiny speck of light, but the actual size of the halo ...extends to a very
large radius and it actually fills a substantial portion of the night sky," said
study team member Jason Kalirai of the University of California, Santa Cruz.
The finding was presented Sunday in Seattle,
Wash., at the 209th meeting of the American Astronomical Society. It
suggests Andromeda is at least one million light-years across and could help
settle a discrepancy between Andromeda and the Milky Way that has long puzzled
astronomers.
Also known as M31, Andromeda is located only about
2.5 million light-years from Earth.
Like the Milky Way, Andromeda is a classic spiral
galaxy, which typically consists of three main parts: a flattened disk, a bright
central bulge of densely packed stars and an extended spherical halo where stars
are more sparsely distributed.
Using the Mayall and Keck telescopes, and the DEIMOS
spectrograph, the researchers found previously unseen red giant stars out to a
distance of at least 500,000 light years from Andromeda's center.
The astronomers discovered Andromeda's faint
halo stars using a technique developed by Karoline Gilbert, a UCSC graduate
student, that distinguishes the halo stars from the more numerous foreground
stars in our Milky Way.
A dim foreground star and a bright star located much
farther away -- whose light can be diminished by interstellar gas -- can be hard
to tell apart because they appear to have similar luminosities as stars in our
own galaxy. The researchers liken the effect to distinguishing between the light
of a firefly 10 feet away and that of a powerful beacon in the distance.
"In this case, the fireflies are dwarf stars in our
own galaxy and the beacons are the red giant stars in Andromeda," said study
team member Puraga Guhathakurta, also from USCS.
According to current galactic formation theories, the
halo is the first part of a galaxy that forms.
Stars in the halo are predicted to be metal poor
because they formed during a time when the universe had much less heavy metal
content than it does now. Heavy metals are created as stars evolve and then
spewed out into interstellar space when ancient stars either explode as
supernovas or shed their outer layers to become white dwarfs.
"The first stars are expected to be chemically
deficient, and as these other components such as the disk of the galaxy form
later, it is contaminated by the products of those first stars, so those stars
are more metal rich," Kalirai said.
However, instead of being metal-poor, previous
studies have found that Andromeda's halo stars were actually 10 times richer in
metals than halo stars in our galaxy. This finding puzzled astronomers because
both Andromeda and the Milky Way should have similar formation histories.
The new findings could solve this discrepancy because
the red giant stars are anemic, as is expected from galaxy formation theories
and what is known about the Milky Way.
"If you plot the metalicity as a function of radius,
you see a very nice trend where the inner parts of the galaxy are metal rich,
and the outer parts of the galaxy are dominated by stars that are metal-poor,"
Kalirai said.
"We now believe that previous groups have been
mistakenly identifying the outer parts of the Andromeda bulge as its halo,"
Guhathakurta said.
Paul Hodge, an expert on the Andromeda galaxy from
Washington University who was not involved in the study, said the new finding
paints a very different picture of our galactic neighbor than was available only
a few years ago.
"It's a new galaxy," Hodge said. "The outer parts of
this galaxy are finally being revealed and its turning out to be much more
interesting and beautiful than one could have imagined."
(Agencies)
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