Established in 2020 Wednesday, April 17, 2024


New discovery about distant galaxies: Stars are heavier than we thought
At each redshift, the distribution is individually normalized in order to emphasize the temperature distribution at all redshifts. Image courtesy: The European Physical Journal E (2022). DOI: 10.1140/epje/s10189-022-00183-5.



COPENHAGEN.- A team of University of Copenhagen astrophysicists has arrived at a major result regarding star populations beyond the Milky Way. The result could change our understanding of a wide range of astronomical phenomena, including the formation of black holes, supernovae and why galaxies die.

For as long as humans have studied the heavens, how stars look in distant galaxies has been a mystery. In a study published in The Astrophysical Journal, a team of researchers at the University of Copenhagen's Niels Bohr Institute is challenging previous understandings of stars beyond our own galaxy.

Since 1955, it has been assumed that the composition of stars in the universe's other galaxies is similar to that of the hundreds of billions of stars within our own—a mixture of massive, medium mass and low mass stars. But with the help of observations from 140,000 galaxies across the universe and a wide range of advanced models, the team has tested whether the same distribution of stars apparent in the Milky Way applies elsewhere. The answer is no. Stars in distant galaxies are typically more massive than those in our "local neighborhood." The finding has a major impact on what we think we know about the universe.

"The mass of stars tells us astronomers a lot. If you change mass, you also change the number of supernovae and black holes that arise out of massive stars. As such, our result means that we'll have to revise many of the things we once presumed, because distant galaxies look quite different from our own," says Albert Sneppen, a graduate student at the Niels Bohr Institute and first author of the study.

Analyzed light from 140,000 galaxies
Researchers assumed that the size and weight of stars in other galaxies was similar to our own for more than fifty years, for the simple reason that they were unable to observe them through a telescope, as they could with the stars of our own galaxy.

Distant galaxies are billions of light-years away. As a result, only light from their most powerful stars ever reaches Earth. This has been a headache for researchers around the world for years, as they could never accurately clarify how stars in other galaxies were distributed, an uncertainty that forced them to believe that they were distributed much like the stars in our Milky Way.

"We've only been able to see the tip of the iceberg and known for a long time that expecting other galaxies to look like our own was not a particularly good assumption to make. However, no one has ever been able to prove that other galaxies form different populations of stars. This study has allowed us to do just that, which may open the door for a deeper understanding of galaxy formation and evolution," says Associate Professor Charles Steinhardt, a co-author of the study.

In the study, the researchers analyzed light from 140,000 galaxies using the COSMOS catalog, a large international database of more than one million observations of light from other galaxies. These galaxies are distributed from the nearest to farthest reaches of the universe, from which light has traveled a full twelve billion years before being observable on Earth.

Massive galaxies die first
According to the researchers, the new discovery will have a wide range of implications. For example, it remains unresolved why galaxies die and stop forming new stars. The new result suggests that this might be explained by a simple trend.

"Now that we are better able to decode the mass of stars, we can see a new pattern; the least massive galaxies continue to form stars, while the more massive galaxies stop birthing new stars. This suggests a remarkably universal trend in the death of galaxies," concludes Sneppen.







Today's News

May 27, 2022

Why did Mars dry out? New study points to unusual answers

First Pompeiian human genome sequenced

Palaeospondylus: Long-standing mystery of vertebrate evolution solved using powerful X-rays

Researchers teleport quantum information across rudimentary quantum network

Smart, dissolving pacemaker communicates with body-area sensor and control network

Tracking chirality in real time

Hot-blooded T. rex and cold-blooded Stegosaurus: Chemical clues reveal dinosaur metabolism

Team develops mechanism to control actuation, cooling and energy conversion for soft robotics

Showing that species thrive through social connections

Professional 'guilds' of bacteria gave rise to the modern microbiome

UCLA study identifies how the brain links memories

New discovery about distant galaxies: Stars are heavier than we thought

Hawks' eyes may not help the world's only nocturnal hawk hunt at night

Secrets of tree hyraxes in Kenya uncovered with new research techniques

A quantum drum that stores quantum states for record-long times

How the universe got its magnetic field

Researchers identify novel factors involved in silencing fetal hemoglobin

New database to 'SpUR' on cancer research



 


Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez



Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the ResearchNews newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful