BEIJING, May 28 (Xinhuanet) -- How much does the
Milky Way weigh? Prior estimates have been as high as 2 trillion solar masses,
but the latest figure using a more refined method puts our galaxy's mass at a
bit less than 1 trillion times the weight of our sun.
The galaxy's mass is a mix of
stars, gas, dust and mysterious dark matter.
The new estimate is based on a large sample of stars
in the galactic halo, a relatively sparse sphere of stars that surrounds our
galaxy's main disk. The speeds of stars in the halo reveal the mass of the
galaxy by allowing astrophysicists to infer the amount of gravity required to
keep those stars in orbit.
"The galaxy is slimmer than we thought," said
Xiangxiang Xue of the National Astronomical Observatories of China, who led the
international team of researchers. "That means it has less dark matter than
previously believed, but also that it was more efficient in converting its
original supply of hydrogen and helium into stars."
The finding, based on data from the Sloan Digital Sky
Survey (SDSS-II), has broad implications for our understanding of the Milky Way,
the researchers said in a statement.
"The total mass of the galaxy is hard to measure
because we're stuck in the middle of it," explained collaborator Timothy Beers
of Michigan State University. "But it is the single most fundamental number we
have to know if we want to understand how the Milky Way formed or compare it to
distant galaxies that we see from the outside."
Previous estimates had been based on 500 objects or
fewer. The new math was based on data for 2,400 stars.
The larger data set "gives us a huge statistical
advantage," said study team member Hans-Walter Rix of the Max Planck Institute
for Astronomy (MPIA) in Heidelberg, Germany.
(Agencies)