University of Western Australia: Galaxy murder mystery solved
Galaxies are being killed in one of the most extreme regions of the nearby Universe and astronomers think they know why. A paper published today in the Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series provides the clearest evidence yet that the extreme environments surrounding galaxies can reach far within them and steal their molecular gas – the fuel needed to birth new stars and keep a galaxy alive.
This paper by a collaboration of 36 international astronomers, including researchers from the University of Western Australia node of the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR), presents state-of-the-art observations of molecular gas in 51 galaxies belonging to the Virgo Cluster. It’s the first paper to be released from the Virgo Environment Traced in Carbon Monoxide Survey (VERTICO), undertaken using the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) in Chile. \
“We know that galaxies in the most extreme environments suffer tremendously, losing their gas reservoirs and eventually being unable to form any more stars. For a galaxy that’s the equivalent of dying” said co-author Dr Claudia Lagos, ASTRO 3D Senior Research Fellow at ICRAR-UWA. “VERTICO offers us an unprecedented window on how the molecular gas, the direct fuel for new stars, is affected, allowing us to effectively diagnose what’s killing those galaxies.”
A galaxy’s ability to form stars is influenced by where the galaxy lives in the Universe and how it interacts with its surroundings. Of the many different environments in the Universe, galaxy clusters are among the most massive, hottest, and most extreme, making them the perfect cosmic laboratory for observations such as VERTICO. The nearby Virgo Cluster is seven million light-years across and contains thousands of galaxies hurtling through superheated plasma at speeds of up to several million kilometres per hour. It is an environment so extreme and inhospitable that entire galaxies can be stopped from forming stars in a process known as galaxy quenching. Not to worry though, our own Milky Way galaxy is nowhere near any cluster and isn’t in any danger of having its gas stripped away.
“With VERTICO, we looked at the gas reservoir of 51 galaxies in the Virgo Cluster, one of the most extreme environments we know of. We were able to create among the most detailed maps of the distribution of gas in cluster galaxies ever observed. These images provide the missing pieces of the puzzle of how environment affects the gas content of galaxies, specially the dense and cold gas, and hence their ability to form stars.”
Dr Claudia Lagos
In the new results, the majority of VERTICO galaxies show evidence that the cluster environment left an imprint on their gas disks, providing the clearest evidence yet that external environmental mechanisms reach far into galaxies to disturb and perturb their molecular gas, and impact their star formation.
“Gas stripping is one of the most spectacular and violent external mechanisms that can shut down star formation in galaxies.” explains lead author Dr Toby Brown, ICRAR alumnus and Plaskett Fellow at the National Research Council of Canada. “Gas stripping occurs when galaxies are moving so fast through hot plasma in the cluster, that vast quantities of cold molecular gas are stripped from the galaxy – as though the gas is being swept away by a huge cosmic broom. The exquisite quality of VERTICO’s observations allows us to better see and understand such mechanisms.”
This unprecedented detail of galaxies in the highly active Virgo Cluster will provide astronomers with the data needed to study and better understand how star formation and galaxy evolution proceed in the most extreme environments in the Universe, in an effort to better understand our own.