Translate

Friday, July 20, 2012

Astronomers first observed dark galaxies in the early universe


Astronomers have observed first dark galaxy, an early stage of galaxy formation, said the European Southern Observatory (ESO) from its headquarters in the German city of Garching, to the south. The Scientists used the long-range telescope (VLT, for its acronym in English) Cerro Paranal Observatory in Chile, which managed to detect these gas-rich galaxies that do not contain stars, noting its brightness when illuminated by the light of a quasar.
According to Simon Lilly, of the University of Zurich (Switzerland), "the solution to the problem of detecting a dark galaxy was simply to shed some light on it." "We wanted the fluorescent glow of the gas in galaxies dark when illuminated by ultraviolet light from a quasar close and very bright. The quasar's light makes the dark galaxy is lit in a similar process that occurs when the linen is illuminated with ultraviolet light in a disco, "he said . Addition, the team of scientists managed to identify some of the properties of dark galaxies, such as the mass of gas contained is about a billion times the mass of the Sun, the stuff of low-mass galaxies rich gas in the early universe. "Our VLT observations have provided evidence for the existence of compact, isolated dark clouds," said Sebastiano Cantalupo, University of California (USA), author of the study. He said the team has taken "a crucial step to reveal and understand both the dark early stages of galaxy formation, as the process by which they acquired their gas." Astronomers used the large collecting area and precision of the VLT, with which A series of very long exposures to detect the weak fluorescent glow of dark galaxies, located a few million light years from the quasar, which does not contain stars, emit little light.

No comments: