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November 23, 2009

Dark galaxy may be crashing into Milky Way

New calculations by a team of astronomers have indicated that a dark galaxy may be crashing into our own Milky Way.

In 2008, a cloud of hydrogen with a mass then estimated at about 1 million suns was found to be colliding with our galaxy.

It appears that the object is massive enough to be a galaxy itself.

Called Smith’s cloud, it has managed to avoid disintegrating during its smash-up with our own, much bigger galaxy.

What’s more, its trajectory suggests it punched through the disc of our galaxy once before, about 70 million years ago.

To have survived, it must contain much more matter than previously thought, in order to provide enough gravity to hold it together.

Calculations by Matthew Nichols and Joss Bland-Hawthorn of the University of Sydney, Australia, indicate that it has about 100 times the previously estimated mass.

Many more such dark galaxies may be out there, according to Leo Blitz of the University of California, Berkeley.

Simulations of galaxy formation suggest a galaxy the size of the Milky Way should feature about 1000 dwarf galaxies, but only a few dozen have been found so far.

“Some of the missing dwarfs may be dark galaxies that are all but invisible,” said Blitz.

ANI

1 comments:

Jonathan said...

I'm curious to know the ratio in size of this dark galaxy to the Milky Way. Is it one forth the distance across? Bigger? Smaller? What's the density?