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Dwarf galaxy catches globular cluster by Staff Writers Amsterdam, Netherlands (SPX) Oct 19, 2021
Astronomers already knew that our own Milky Way grew by taking in smaller galaxies. But now a team of Italian-Dutch researchers have shown that a small galaxy neighbouring the Milky Way has in turn absorbed an even smaller galaxy from its vicinity. The researchers will publish their findings on Monday in the journal Nature Astronomy. According to the prevailing theory, large galaxies such as our Milky Way were formed by mergers with smaller galaxies. In recent years, evidence for this has indeed been found for our Milky Way thanks to the Gaia satellite. An Italian-Dutch team of researchers wanted to prove the hypothesis that small galaxies are in turn made up of even smaller ones.
Globular clusters The researchers analysed the chemical composition of eleven globular clusters collected by the Very Large Telescope and the Magellan telescopes in Chile. Of the eleven globular clusters studied in the Large Magellanic Cloud, one was found to have a distinctly different chemical composition. It is globular cluster NGC 2005. This cluster contains about 200,000 stars and is located 750 light years away from the centre of the Large Magellanic Cloud. Among other things, it contains less zinc, copper, silicon and calcium than the ten other clusters.
Relic of earlier merger Researcher Davide Massari, who works in Italy and at the University of Groningen, is delighted: "We are actually seeing a relic of an earlier merger. And we have now convincingly demonstrated for the first time that small galaxies neighboring our Milky Way have in turn built up from even smaller galaxies."
Research Report: "A relic from a past merger event in the Large Magellanic Cloud"
Process leading to supernova explosions and cosmic radio bursts unearthed at PPPL Plainsboro NJ (SPX) Oct 07, 2021 A promising method for producing and observing on Earth a process important to black holes, supernova explosions and other extreme cosmic events has been proposed by scientists at Princeton University's Department of Astrophysical Sciences, SLAC National Acceleraor Laboratory, and the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL). The process, called quantum electrodynamic (QED) cascades, can lead to supernovas - exploding stars - and fast radio bursts that equal in ... read more
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