A remote galaxy (in the box), and how Hubble sees it (middle panel) and the galaxy's gas motion is measured with the VLT (left panel). In the latter, parts which are red are moving away from us, while those that are blue are moving towards us.
Telescopes team up for 3D view of galaxies
12 Mar 2009
Astronomers have obtained exceptional 3D views of distant galaxies, seen when the universe was just half its current age, by combining the twin strengths of the NASA/European Space Agency (ESA) Hubble Space Telescope's acute eye, and the capacity of European Southern Observatory's (ESO) Very Large Telescope (VLT) to probe the motions of gas in tiny objects.
By looking at this unique "history book" of our universe, at an epoch when the Sun and the Earth did not yet exist, scientists hope to solve the puzzle of how galaxies formed in the remote past.
For decades, distant galaxies that emitted their light six billion years ago could be seen as no more than small specks of light in the sky. But with the launch of the Hubble Space Telescope in the early 1990s, astronomers were able to scrutinise the structure of distant galaxies in some detail for the first time.
Under the superb skies of Paranal Observatory in Chile, the VLT's FLAMES/GIRAFFE spectrograph can now also study the motions of the gas in these distant galaxies. (A spectrograph is a device for splitting light into its constituent wavelengths.)
"This unique combination of Hubble and the VLT allows us to model distant galaxies almost as nicely as we can close ones," says Francois Hammer, who led the team. "In effect, FLAMES/GIRAFFE now allows us to measure the velocity of the gas at various locations in these objects. This means that we can see how the gas is moving, which provides us with a three-dimensional view of galaxies halfway across the universe."
The team has undertaken the Herculean task of reconstituting the history of about one hundred remote galaxies that have been studied both with Hubble and with GIRAFFE on the VLT. The first results are coming in and have already provided useful insights for three galaxies.
In one galaxy, GIRAFFE revealed a region full of ionised gas—that is, hot gas composed of atoms that have been stripped of one or several electrons. This is normally due to the presence of very hot, young stars. However, even after staring at the region for more than 11 days, Hubble did not see any stars!
"Clearly this unusual galaxy has some hidden secrets," says Mathieu Puech, lead author of one of the papers reporting this study. Comparisons with computer simulations suggest that the explanation lies in the collision of two very gas-rich spiral galaxies. The heat produced by the collision would ionise the gas, making it too hot for stars to form.
Computer simulations show how two galaxies can merge to produce a galaxy looking like the one the Hubble Space Telescope saw.
Another galaxy the astronomers studied showed the opposite effect. There they discovered a bluish central region enshrouded in a reddish cloud, almost completely hidden by dust. "The models indicate that gas and stars could be spiralling inwards rapidly," says Hammer. This might be the first example of a galaxy rebuilt after a major merger between two galaxies.
Finally, in a third galaxy, the astronomers identified a very unusual, extremely blue, elongated structure—a bar—composed of young, massive stars, rarely observed in nearby galaxies. Comparisons with computer simulations showed the astronomers that the properties of this object are well understood by a collision between two galaxies of unequal mass.
"The unique combination of Hubble and FLAMES/GIRAFFE at the VLT makes it possible to model distant galaxies in great detail, and reach a consensus on the crucial role of galaxy collisions for the formation of stars in a remote past," says Puech.
"It is because we can now see how the gas is moving that we can trace back the mass and the orbits of the ancestral galaxies relatively accurately. Hubble and the VLT are real 'time machines' for probing the universe's history", adds Sebastien Peirani, lead author of another paper reporting on this study.
The astronomers are now extending their analysis to the whole sample of galaxies observed. "The next step will then be to compare this with closer galaxies, and so, piece together a picture of the evolution of galaxies over the past six to eight billion years, that is, over half the age of the Universe," concludes Hammer.
Adapted from information issued by ESO.
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