#cosmic_objects
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phonemantra-blog · 2 years ago
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The Hubble telescope captured the galaxy NGC 685, made up of more than 100 million stars, appearing to orbit in the depths of space The average galaxy NGC 685 contains at least 100 million stars. About 58 million light-years from Earth, galaxy NGC 685 appears to be orbiting in the depths of space. The Hubble Space Telescope image, the last of six released as part of Hubble's Galaxy Week, shows the galaxy with its spiral arms dotted with countless pockets of bright blue regions called star clusters. Closer to the center of the galaxy, there are also many twisted red wisps, representing bands of gas and dust where new generations of stars form over eons. [caption id="attachment_69171" align="aligncenter" width="598"] galaxy[/caption] NGC 685: a galaxy home to millions of stars surprised Hubble NASA's accompanying description of the photo of the galaxy NGC 685 says it is located in the constellation Eridanus, measures about 60,000 light-years, and may contain at least 100 million stars. In comparison, the Milky Way is estimated to consist of approximately 100 billion stars. Despite the difference in size and number of stars, both galaxies have an interesting feature: they have a central bar that crosses the cores of the galaxies. In this image of the galaxy NGC 685, this red-flecked bar can be seen stretching horizontally within a small circle of gas and dust. Its intense brilliance is due to the many stars concentrated in a relatively small area. Previous studies have shown that such bars are observed in about two-thirds of spiral galaxies. Gas and other material flows into the galactic cores through these bridges, indicating that the galaxy's "formative period" is over, astronomers say. Although little time has been devoted to studying NGC 685, studying bar galaxies like this one helps astronomers understand how galaxies evolve and whether the process is different for our galaxy.
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phonemantra-blog · 2 years ago
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Astronomers have discovered a galaxy that already had a high concentration of metals a billion years after the Big Bang. Early galaxies contain mostly hydrogen and helium, but this distant galaxy is anomalously rich in metals The universe is becoming more metallic over time: in its younger days, it was composed mostly of hydrogen and helium. But recently, researchers discovered a galaxy that was well ahead of this trend and, a billion years after the Big Bang, had accumulated a high content of metals. Almost all atoms heavier than helium originate in stars, the “forges of the cosmos,” which transform primordial materials into the many different elements we see today. These "forges" process the finite amount of hydrogen and helium in the Universe. As a result, the total supply of hydrogen decreases over time, while the proportion of heavier elements (which astronomers call "metals" regardless of their actual metallic properties) increases. When astronomers look back and observe the early stages of the universe, they expect to see mostly pure hydrogen and helium. [caption id="attachment_68900" align="aligncenter" width="780"] galaxy[/caption] This prediction is generally supported by observations, and when looking at galaxies created in the first 1.5 billion years after the Big Bang, researchers most often observe clouds of gas that contain almost no metals. However, a collaboration led by Jianhao Huyang of the University of South Carolina recently discovered a contradiction to this convention: their observations of a hazy galaxy created a billion years ago showed a metal fraction higher than predicted for such a young source by more than two orders of magnitude. Astronomers have discovered a galaxy that set the trend for a high proportion of metals before anyone else Huyang and his colleagues made this discovery by observing a distant quasar called SDSS J002526.84-014532.5, which has a redshift of 5.07. Between the Earth and this source, there is a galaxy with a redshift of 4.74. As light from a quasar passes through the diffuse gas of a galaxy on its way to our telescopes, certain wavelengths of radiation are preferentially absorbed by the molecules and atoms they encounter along the way. By measuring the relative amount of this absorption, the researchers were able to determine which elements were trying to block the path of light and how dense they were. They discovered that the galaxy contains significant amounts of carbon, oxygen, magnesium, and other heavy elements. Just 1.2 billion years after the Big Bang, this galaxy already had a greater relative amount of carbon and oxygen than our own Sun, which was born many billions of years later. Models of early galaxy formation predict a significantly lower proportion of metals, even taking into account the large uncertainties of described but not yet seen first-generation stars. Like many unexpected discoveries, the authors of the present study cannot yet explain what could lead to such a significant content of heavy elements. They acknowledge that this may be because looking at this particular direction may have passed through a patch of "developed" gas, and the galaxy as a whole may be as metal-poor as expected. However, in this case, they will not be able to explain how the light passed through such a small area with exactly the composition data obtained. It may be time to reconsider models of the chemical evolution of early galaxies, or there may be something special about this particular galaxy that remains hidden.
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phonemantra-blog · 2 years ago
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Using computer models, scientists were able to simulate the formation of intermediate-mass black holes in star clusters. This opens up new ways to study mysterious objects The Universe is teeming with black holes from stellar masses to supermassive monsters. But there is one class that remains elusive: “average” black holes. They are called intermediate-mass black holes. How common are they, how are they formed and where are they located? To answer these questions, astronomers modeled possible formation scenarios. Intermediate-mass black holes lie in the mass gap between stellar mass and a supermassive black hole. They range from 100 to 100,000 solar masses. If they exist, do they indicate a hierarchical model of black hole formation and do small black holes form from the collapse of supermassive stars? If this is so, then intermediate-mass black holes will be a kind of “transition link” between stellar mass and supermassive black holes. If this idea is correct, then is it possible that intermediate-mass black holes could collide with each other and form the seeds of supermassive black holes? Astronomers need more observational data to answer all these questions. [caption id="attachment_68861" align="aligncenter" width="780"] star clusters[/caption] At the same time, astronomers have enough data on stellar-mass black holes. They are formed during the collapse of supermassive stars. Supermassive black holes located at the centers of galaxies are most likely formed through the accretion of matter, as well as mergers with other black holes. The existence of intermediate-mass black holes appears to be beyond doubt, but their observation presents certain difficulties. This doesn't mean they don't exist. Observers have found candidates for intermediate-mass black holes in the Milky Way. They also appear to be present in active galactic nuclei, where accretion effects are observed. Additionally, some ultraluminous X-ray sources may also have these "average" black holes. The Sloan Digital Sky Survey also found several potential candidates that emit strongly in the X-ray range. X-ray emission is one of the characteristics of activity around a black hole. One of the most interesting observations involves the gravitational waves emitted when two massive black holes merge. As a result, a black hole with a mass of about 150 solar masses was formed - exactly the kind of mass that can be classified as intermediate. Simulation reveals secret of origin of intermediate-mass black holes in star clusters Scientists are sure they exist, but still cannot determine exactly where and how they are formed. An international group led by Arca Sedda from the Gran Sassa Institute (Italy) modeled the possible mechanisms of their formation.  [caption id="attachment_68862" align="aligncenter" width="451"] star clusters[/caption] “Current observational limitations do not allow us to say anything definitive about the population of intermediate-mass black holes with masses between 1,000 and 10,000 solar masses, and they cause headaches for scientists regarding the possible mechanisms of their formation,” Sedda explained. Sedda and his team looked at star clusters as possible birthplaces for intermediate-mass black holes, and they created computer models that could simulate the formation of these mysterious objects using DRAGON-II data. This is a collection of 19 computer models representing dense clusters of up to a million stars each. Using these in further simulations, the team discovered that the objects they were interested in could form star clusters. This occurs due to a complex combination of three factors: mergers between stars much more massive than the Sun, accretion of matter from the star onto stellar-mass black holes, and mergers between stellar-mass black holes. "The latter process makes it possible to 'see' these phenomena through the detection of gravitational waves," Sedda explained. The team also hypothesized what happens after the birth of intermediate-mass black holes. They appear to be ejected from their clusters by complex gravitational interactions, or experience "relativistic recoil" when formed. This keeps them from gaining weight.  “Our models show that although seeds form naturally from interactions in star clusters, they are unlikely to become heavier than a few hundred solar masses unless the parent cluster is extremely dense or massive,” Sedda said. Finding out the history of the origin of these black holes still does not answer the question of whether they are the missing link between stellar and supermassive black holes. For a better understanding, we need two ingredients: one or more processes capable of forming black holes in the intermediate mass range and the ability to preserve such black holes. Our study places strict constraints on the first ingredient, providing clear insight into what processes may contribute to the formation of intermediate-mass black holes. Looking at more massive clusters containing more binary star systems in the future may be the key to obtaining the second ingredient. But this will require enormous effort from a technological and computational point of view.
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phonemantra-blog · 2 years ago
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Mysterious flares that periodically hit Earth may be the result of neutron star seismology Originally discovered in 2007, fast radio bursts (FRBs) are invisible to the human eye but can be detected by radio telescopes. They come from beyond our galaxy, traveling billions of light years, and are so powerful that the FRB signal can outshine the entire galaxy they come from. Despite this power (and the fact that up to 10,000 FRBs can occur over Earth each day), their source remains unknown, partly because the duration of such flashes is only one-thousandth of a second. FRBs fall into two main categories. Some repeat and others do not, and these make up the vast majority of radio bursts. Moreover, the energy distribution of repeating FRBs is similar to the energy distribution observed during earthquakes. New research from the University of Tokyo has strengthened the case for this similarity, suggesting that radio bursts may be caused by the seismology of neutron stars. [caption id="attachment_68824" align="aligncenter" width="780"] Neutron stars[/caption] Neutron stars have an extreme nature similar to FRBs. They are born when massive stars exhaust their supply of fuel for nuclear reactions and shed their outer layers in supernova explosions. This leaves a stellar core with a mass of one to two solar masses and a diameter of only 20 kilometers. This rapid compression has three main consequences. First, it creates a substance so dense that one sugar cube from it would weigh about 1 billion tons. Secondly, some stellar remains can rotate at speeds of up to 700 revolutions per second. Finally, the star's super-strong magnetic fields "compress", increasing its strength and creating some of the most powerful magnetic fields known in the Universe. Neutron stars may be sources of mysterious radio bursts Young neutron stars with exceptionally strong magnetic fields are called magnetars and have previously been associated with FRB radiation. The theory of asteroseismology suggests that the surface of a neutron star may be subject to disturbances similar to earthquakes on Earth. One potential reason for this phenomenon could be the stress that occurs when their exceptionally strong magnetic fields twist. “Theoretically, the surface of a magnetar could experience disturbances that release energy similar to earthquakes on Earth. Recent observations have resulted in a collection of thousands of FRBs, and we took the opportunity to compare large-scale FRB statistics with data from earthquakes and solar flares to explore possible similarities,” said one of the team members, Tomonori Totani from the University of Tokyo. The team looked at the timing and energy of radiation from about 7,000 repeating radio bursts, using the same method used to analyze the time-energy correlation of earthquakes and solar flares. The results showed a significant correlation between FRBs and earthquakes, but not between FRBs and solar flares. The team found four main similarities between FRBs and earthquakes. First, the probability of occurrence for an individual FRB and an earthquake is between 10% and 50%. Secondly, their frequency decreases with time, according to a power function of time. Finally, their speed always remains constant, even if the average number of FRBs changes significantly. At the same time, no correlation was found between the energy of the main ejection in both events and the shaking of the star’s surface. This indicates that when neutron stars experience shocks and disturbances on their surfaces, they release enormous amounts of energy, which astrophysicists observe in the form of FRBs. To fully confirm this, the team will continue to analyze new FRB data as it becomes available. “The interior of a neutron star is the densest place in the Universe, comparable to the interior of an atomic nucleus. Neutron star seismology has opened up new insights into very high-density matter and the fundamental laws of nuclear physics,” Totani said.
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phonemantra-blog · 2 years ago
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The absence of white dwarfs in the Hyades cluster is of interest to astronomers, and this case helps reconstruct the history of the cluster The Hyades star cluster is located about 153 light years away. At such a short distance it is visible to the naked eye in the constellation Taurus. THIS proximity makes it easier for professional astronomers to observe than many other objects. The Hyades cluster contains many stars with approximately the same age - about 625 million years, the same metallicity, and similar trajectories. But it lacks white dwarfs - there are only eight of them in the center of the cluster. The Hyades cluster is quite common. His research greatly helps in understanding star clusters. But such a feature as the almost complete absence of white dwarfs puzzles astronomers.  A new study has found one "escapee" from the cluster. This is a white dwarf whose mass is approaching the limiting value for this type of star. The study is called "A White Dwarf That Was Able to Escape the Hyades Star Cluster." [caption id="attachment_68737" align="aligncenter" width="769"] star cluster[/caption] An extremely massive white dwarf was able to escape the Hyades star cluster Clusters such as the Hyades are weakly gravitationally bound, and over time they lose stars through their interactions with gas clouds, other clusters, and between the cluster stars themselves. Study author David Miller of the Department of Physics and Astronomy at the University of British Columbia and his co-authors studied the phenomenon of the absence of white dwarfs in the Hyades to reconstruct the history of the cluster. If we can identify the stars that were expelled, especially white dwarfs in this case, then it is possible to reconstruct the history of the cluster. The European Space Agency's Gaia space telescope tracks more than 1 billion stars in the Milky Way, providing Miller and his colleagues with a huge amount of data. The team found three white dwarfs with trajectories indicating possible escape from the Hyades cluster. For two of them, the range of masses makes it unlikely that they originated in a cluster, but for the third object, it is possible. "We estimate there is a 97.8% probability that the candidate is a true native of the Hyades" White dwarfs have a mass comparable to the Sun, but their size is comparable to the Earth. They consist of degenerate matter and emit only residual thermal energy. This is the final state of about 97% of the stars in the Milky Way. Their mass is governed by the Chandrasekhar limit and at maximum can reach about 1.44 solar masses. Large white dwarfs are usually found in binary star systems and gain mass by pulling matter from a companion; such white dwarfs eventually explode in a type 1a supernova, and all their mass is dissipated. [caption id="attachment_68738" align="alignnone" width="780"] star cluster[/caption] The white dwarf that left the Hyades is called an ultramassive white dwarf. These have a mass of 1.10 or more solar masses. This is well below the Chandrasekhar limit, but well above the average mass of a white dwarf, which is about 0.6 solar masses. Such high-mass objects typically originate from two-parent stars in a binary system, where one star has "taken" material from the other, increasing its mass. However, the Hyades ultramassive white dwarf has a mass of 1.317 solar masses and an age consistent with only one parent star. It appears to be the most massive white dwarf to come from a single progenitor.
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