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New GAIA data reveals mergers in Milky Way by Staff Writers Groningen, Netherlands (SPX) Jun 15, 2018
University of Groningen astronomers have discovered relics of merger events in the Milky Way halo. Five small groups of stars appear to represent mergers with smaller galaxies, while a big 'blob' comprising hundreds of stars appears to be the remnant of a large merger event. These results were published in The Astrophysical Journal Letters on 12 June. The study is based on the recent Gaia Data Release 2. This provided the astronomical community with accurate information on the position and movement of millions of stars, mostly in the Milky Way. PhD student Helmer Koppelman is part of the research group of Professor of Dynamics, Structure and Formation of the Milky Way Amina Helmi, who has been involved in the Gaia mission almost from its inception. He started analyzing the data right after the release and published a preprint of the article just eight days later. This has now been officially published.
Halo 'We collected information from stars within 3,000 light years of the Sun, as the accuracy of the position and movement is highest for stars that are near us', Koppelman explains. The first step was to filter out the stars from the Milky Way disk. 'These stars move around the centre of the disk, so are easily identified.' What remained were about 6,000 halo stars.
Blob This suggests they are the result of a merger with a large galaxy. In fact, we believe that this merger event must have remodelled the disk in our Milky Way.' A more detailed study of the nature of this merger is now underway. 'At this point in time, we can say that our Milky Way was shaped by a massive merger event and some smaller mergers.' Koppelman also looked for stars belonging to the 'Helmi stream', which is named after his PhD supervisor who identified it back in 1999 as the remnant of a merger event. 'Up to now, fewer than twenty stars belonging to the Helmi stream had been identified. The Gaia data has added over a hundred new stars.' Further analysis should clarify the nature of the galaxy that produced this stream. 'We will also be looking at stars beyond 3,000 light years to discover more members of the different streams we identified. Together with simulations of galaxy evolution, this should give us exciting new insights into the evolution of the Milky Way.' Helmer H. Koppelman, Amina Helmi, Jovan Veljanoski: One large blob and many streams frosting the nearby stellar halo in Gaia DR2. APJ Letters, 12 June 2018
Nanodiamonds explain mysterious source of Milky Way microwaves Washington (UPI) Jun 11, 2018 Astronomers have discovered microscopic gemstones surrounding three infant star systems in the Milky Way. Researchers believe tiny diamonds account for the shimmer of cosmic microwave light that has puzzled astronomers for 20 years. The shimmer is known as anomalous microwave emission, or AME. For decades, scientists have struggled to explain why the odd glow emanates from several of the galaxy's protoplanetary disks. Until now, scientists thought the most likely culprit was a type of ca ... read more
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