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Andromeda's building blocks.


It takes a lot of gas to construct a galaxy, but it's only recently that astronomers have identified what may be gaseous remnants from the Milky Way's formation. Now, a radio telescope radio telescope: see radio astronomy.
radio telescope

Combination of radio receiver and antenna, used for observation in radio and radar astronomy.
 has made the first conclusive observations of gas clouds that could be the leftover building blocks of the Andromeda galaxy Andromeda Galaxy, cataloged as M31 and NGC 224, the closest large galaxy to the Milky Way and the only one visible to the naked eye in the Northern Hemisphere. It is also known as the Great Nebula in Andromeda. It is 2. , the Milky Way's nearest galactic neighbor of comparable size.

Large galaxies such as Andromeda and the Milky Way Milky Way, the galaxy of which the sun and solar system are a part, seen as a broad band of light arching across the night sky from horizon to horizon; if not blocked by the horizon, it would be seen as a circle around the entire sky.  grow in two ways--by gobbling up smaller galaxies and by snaring clouds of hydrogen gas. It's clouds such as these that David A. Thilker of Johns Hopkins University Johns Hopkins University, mainly at Baltimore, Md. Johns Hopkins in 1867 had a group of his associates incorporated as the trustees of a university and a hospital, endowing each with $3.5 million. Daniel C.  in Baltimore and his colleagues have now detected swarming around Andromeda. They describe their findings in an upcoming Astrophysical Journal The Astrophysical Journal, often abbreviated to ApJ, is a scientific journal covering astronomy and astrophysics. It was founded in 1895 by George Ellery Hale and James E. Keeler. It currently (October 2006) publishes three issues per month, with 500 pages per issue.  Letters.

A similar collection of clouds, associated with the Milky Way, was first detected in 1963, but astronomers weren't sure until the mid-1990s how the gas might be linked to our galaxy's formation (SN: 1/25/97, p. 55). Even then, it remained unclear whether the clouds are pristine remnants of the galaxy's formation or gas that was incorporated into the Milky Way but then expelled by supernovas.

The Andromeda finding strengthens the case that the high-velocity clouds surrounding the Milky Way include remnant gas from the galaxy's origin, says Thilker. His team detected 20 clouds of neutral atomic hydrogen around Andromeda by recording faint but telltale radio emissions with the Green Bank (W.Va.) Telescope. Observations with the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope The Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope (WSRT) (near Westerbork (camp), north of Westerbork (village), Midden-Drenthe, in the northeastern Netherlands) is an aperture synthesis interferometer that consists of a linear array of 14 antennas arranged on a 2.7 km East-West line.  in the Netherlands added to the evidence.

The new observations indicate that the clouds lie too far away from the disk of Andromeda to be material expelled by supernovas within the galaxy, says Thilker.
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Title Annotation:Astronomy
Author:Cowen, Ron
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Mar 27, 2004
Words:275
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