Scientists resolve conflict in theory of how galaxies form
January 14th, 2010 - 3:26 pm ICT by ANI ( Leave a comment )London, Jan 14 (ANI): Scientists have resolved the conflict in theory of how galaxies form by using millions of hours on supercomputers to run simulations of galaxy formation (1 million hours is more than 100 years).
While the Big Bang theory suggested that most galaxies should have far more stars and dark matter at their cores than they actually do.
The problem is most pronounced for dwarf galaxies, the most common galaxies in our own celestial neighbourhood-each contains less than 1 percent of the stars found in large galaxies such as the Milky Way.
The simulations, created by an international research team, led by a University of Washington astronomer, produced dwarf galaxies very much like those observed today by satellites and large telescopes around the world.
“Most previous work included only a simple description of how and where stars formed within galaxies, or neglected star formation altogether,” Nature quoted Fabio Governato, a UW research associate professor of astronomy and lead author of the study, as saying.
“Instead we performed new computer simulations, run over several national supercomputing facilities, and included a better description of where and how star formation happens in galaxies,” he added.
The simulations showed that as the most massive new stars exploded as supernovas, the blasts generated enormous winds that swept huge amounts of gas away from the centre of what would become dwarf galaxies, preventing millions of new stars from forming.
With so much mass suddenly removed from the centre of the galaxy, the pull of gravity on the dark matter there is diminished and the dark matter drifts away, said Governato.
It is similar to what would happen if our Sun suddenly disappeared and the loss of its gravitational pull allowed the Earth to drift off into space.
The cosmic explosions proved to be the missing piece of the puzzle, and adding them to the simulations generated formation of galaxies with substantially lower densities at their cores, closely matching the observed properties of dwarf galaxies.
“The cold dark matter theory works amazingly well at telling where, when and how many galaxies should form. What we did was find a better description of processes that we know happen in the real universe, resulting in more accurate simulations,” said Governato.
The theory of cold dark matter, first advanced in the mid 1980s, holds that the vast majority of the matter in the universe-as much as 75 percent- is made up of “dark” material that does not interact with electrons and protons and so cannot be observed from electromagnetic radiation.
The term “cold” means that immediately following the Big Bang these dark matter particles have speeds far lower than the speed of light.
In the cold dark matter theory, smaller structures form first, then they merge with each other to form more massive halos, and finally galaxies form within the halos.
The study has been published in Nature. (ANI)
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