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Ghostly galaxy: massive, dark cloud intrigues scientists.


It looks like an empty patch of space, but astronomers say it holds a galaxy that contains no stars. If Robert Minchin of Cardiff University Cardiff University (Welsh: Prifysgol Caerdydd) is a leading university located in the Cathays Park area of Cardiff, Wales. It received its Royal charter in 1883 and is a member of the Russell Group of Universities. It has an annual turnover of £315 million.  in Wales Wales, Welsh Cymru, western peninsula and political division (principality) of Great Britain (1991 pop. 2,798,200), 8,016 sq mi (20,761 sq km), west of England; politically united with England since 1536. The capital is Cardiff.  and his colleagues are right, they have found the first member of a population of galaxies that theorists have proposed but observers had never seen.

In 2000, Minchin's team noticed two apparently isolated hydrogen clouds in a radio telescope radio telescope: see radio astronomy.
radio telescope

Combination of radio receiver and antenna, used for observation in radio and radar astronomy.
 survey of the Virgo Cluster of galaxies. Follow-up observations with visible-light telescopes showed that one of these clouds was associated with a faintly glowing galaxy. However, long exposures taken with the 2.5-meter, visible-light Isaac Newton Telescope The Isaac Newton Telescope or INT is a 2.5m optical telescope run by the ING at Roque de los Muchachos Observatory on La Palma in the Canary Islands. It was originally situated at Herstmonceux Castle in Sussex, England, which was the site of the Royal Greenwich Observatory  in the Canary Islands offered up a surprise: The second cloud had no partner glowing galaxy.

"It's a very intriguing object," comments galaxy researcher Richard S. Ellis of the California Institute of Technology California Institute of Technology, at Pasadena, Calif.; originally for men, became coeducational in 1970; founded 1891 as Throop Polytechnic Institute; called Throop College of Technology, 1913–20.  in Pasadena. "It's puzzling how this ball of hydrogen hasn't got any stars in it."

It could be that several smaller knots of gas fall along the same telescopic line of sight and are masquerading as a single, much bigger cloud, Ellis cautions. Gravitational grav·i·ta·tion  
n.
1. Physics
a. The natural phenomenon of attraction between physical objects with mass or energy.

b. The act or process of moving under the influence of this attraction.

2.
 tugs-of-war between galaxies frequently pull small clouds of hydrogen out of galaxies. But Minchin's team says that, in the case of VIRGOHI21, as their object is called, there are no suitable galaxies nearby to have donated the gas.

Assuming that the hydrogen is contained in one big cloud, its motion suggests that it's a small part of a massive object weighing as much as a galaxy of 100 billion suns. And yet this object remains invisible.

"Seeing a dark galaxy--a galaxy without any stars--is like seeing a city without any people," says Minchin. "We want to know why nobody lives there."

Ordinary galaxies seem to be made of about 10 percent ordinary matter--the kind that forms stars that shine--and 90 percent dark matter, an invisible substance whose nature still eludes astronomers. In an upcoming Astrophysical Journal Letters, Minchin's team reports that VIRGOHI21 has an ordinary-to-dark matter ratio of about 1 to 1,000.

Computer simulations of galaxy formation suggest that there should be many more small galaxies in the universe than observations indicate. Some theorists have suggested the missing galaxies elude observation because they're rife with dark matter yet all but devoid of ordinary star-forming matter.

VIRGOHI21 just might be one of these elusive bastions of dark matter, says Gregory Bothun of the University of Oregon The University of Oregon is a public university located in Eugene, Oregon. The university was founded in 1876, graduating its first class two years later. The University of Oregon is one of 60 members of the Association of American Universities.  in Eugene.

If there are any ordinary-matter stars in VIRGOHI21, they're few and extremely faint. Minchin's group has requested use of the Hubble Space Telescope Hubble Space Telescope (HST), the first large optical orbiting observatory. Built from 1978 to 1990 at a cost of $1.5 billion, the HST (named for astronomer E. P. Hubble) was expected to provide the clearest view yet obtained of the universe. , which may be just powerful enough to detect individual stars in the object. The researchers plan to get higher-resolution radio observations with the Very Large Array radio telescopes near Socorro, N.M., to settle the question of whether the object is a single entity.
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Title Annotation:This Week
Author:Shiga, D.
Publication:Science News
Date:Feb 26, 2005
Words:465
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