Yale Bulletin and Calendar

December 16, 2005|Volume 34, Number 14|Four-Week Issue


BULLETIN HOME

VISITING ON CAMPUS

CALENDAR OF EVENTS

IN THE NEWS

BULLETIN BOARD

CLASSIFIED ADS


SEARCH ARCHIVES

DEADLINES

DOWNLOAD FORMS

BULLETIN STAFF


PUBLIC AFFAIRS HOME

NEWS RELEASES

E-MAIL US


YALE HOME PAGE


These images show the sequence of a typical red galaxy merger. According to Yale astronomer Pieter van Dokkum, more than half of the largest galaxies in the nearby universe have collided and merged with another galaxy in the past two billion years.



Images of sky reveal many
large galaxies have merged

More than half of the largest galaxies in the nearby universe have collided and merged with another galaxy during the past two billion years, according to a Yale astronomer whose study used hundreds of images from two of the deepest sky surveys ever conducted.

The idea of large galaxies being assembled primarily by mergers rather than evolving by themselves in isolation has grown to dominate cosmological thinking. However, a troubling inconsistency within this general theory has been that the most massive galaxies appear to be the oldest, leaving minimal time between the Big Bang and their formation for the mergers to have occurred.

"Our study found these common massive galaxies do form by mergers. It is just that the mergers happen quickly, and the features that reveal the mergers are very faint and therefore difficult to detect," says Pieter van Dokkum, assistant professor of astronomy and sole author of the paper appearing in the December issue of the Astronomical Journal.

The paper uses two recent deep surveys done with the National Science Foundation's 4-meter telescopes at Kitt Peak National Observatory and Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory, known as the NOAO Deep Wide-Field Survey and the Multiwavelength Survey by Yale and Chile. Together, these surveys covered an area of the sky 50 times larger than the size of the full moon and more than 5,000 times larger than the famous Hubble Deep Field.

"We needed data that are very deep over a very wide area to provide statistically meaningful evidence," van Dokkum explains. "As happens so often in science, fresh observations helped inform new conclusions."

Van Dokkum used images from the two surveys to look for tell-tale tidal features around 126 nearby red galaxies, a color selection biased to select the most massive galaxies in the local universe. These faint tidal features turn out to be quite common, with 53% of the galaxies showing tails, broad fans of stars trailing behind them or other obvious asymmetries.

"This implies that there is one galaxy that has endured a major collision and subsequent merger event for every single other 'normal' undisturbed field galaxy," van Dokkum notes. "Remarkably, the collisions that precede the mergers are ongoing in many cases. This allows us to study galaxies before, during and after the collisions."

Although there are not many direct, star-to-star encounters in this merger process, galaxy collisions can have profound effects on star formation rates and the shape of the resulting galaxy, he explains.

These mergers do not resemble the visually spectacular mergers of blue spiral galaxies that are featured in several popular Hubble Space Telescope images, but these red galaxy mergers appear to be much more common, notes van Dokkum. Their ubiquity represents a direct confirmation of predictions by the most common models for the formation of large-scale structure in the universe, with an added benefit of helping solve the apparent-age problem, he says.

"In the past, people equated stellar age with the age of the galaxy," van Dokkum explains. "We have found that, though their stars are generally old, the galaxies that result from these mergers are relatively young."

It is not yet understood why the merging process does not lead to enhanced star formation in the colliding galaxies. It may be that massive black holes in the centers of the galaxies provide the energy to heat or expel the gas that needs to be able to cool in order to form new stars, says the astronomer. Ongoing detailed study of the newly found mergers will provide better insight into the roles that black holes play in the formation and evolution of galaxies, he says.

A series of images of different galaxies in this study that, taken together, represent a time sequence of a typical red galaxy merger, is available at: www.noao.edu/outreach/press/pr05/pr0511.html.

Based in Tucson, Arizona, the National Optical Astronomy Observatory (NOAO) consists of Kitt Peak National Observatory near Tucson, Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory near La Serena, Chile, and the NOAO Gemini Science Center, also in Tucson. NOAO is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy Inc., under a cooperative agreement with the National Science Foundation.

-- By Janet Rettig Emanuel


T H I SW E E K ' SS T O R I E S

Pepper stepping down as Yale V.P.

INTERNATIONAL YALE

Student is embodiment of 'Life Transformed'

Matching contribution program for hurricane relief exceeds expectations

Campus events celebrate Martin Luther King Jr.

Images of sky reveal many large galaxies have merged

Scientists map complex cell signaling network

SCHOOL OF MEDICINE NEWS

New Law School website lists global provisions for protection of children

Famous circus attraction is highlight of Peabody exhibit

The art of cut-and-paste

YCIAS program to explore the theme 'Cuba from Within'

Bromley tribute

Dean Speth's 'Red Sky at Morning' wins Connecticut Book Award

Alexandrov wins MLA prize for his book about 'Anna Karenina'

In Memoriam: Dr. Charles F. McKhann

Japanese officials and Yale experts discuss programs . . .

Campus Notes

Security Procedures for Recess


Bulletin Home|Visiting on Campus|Calendar of Events|In the News

Bulletin Board|Classified Ads|Search Archives|Deadlines

Bulletin Staff|Public Affairs|News Releases| E-Mail Us|Yale Home