| Remarkable Hubble
Space Telescope images of the disk of a distant
spiral galaxy will be presented by astronomers
from The University of Alabama and Bevill State
Community College on Jan. 8 at the American
Astronomical Society meeting in Washington, D.C. Tarsh
Freeman, professor at Bevill State Community
College, and Drs. Gene Byrd and Ron Buta,
professors of astronomy at The University of
Alabama, will present the images.
The galaxy, known as NGC 4622, lies 200
million light years away in the constellation
Centaurus. The images are of special interest
because they solve a mystery about the galaxy
that has lingered for more than a decade. The
mystery was connected to the direction the
galaxy's spiral arms wind outward.
Fifteen years ago I noticed something
unusual in a picture of NGC 4622 from a well-known
undergraduate textbook, said Byrd. The
galaxy was presented in the text as a superb
example of a spiral galaxy, with two bright
spiral arms that open outward in a clockwise
direction. However, in the inner parts of the
galaxy, I noticed another spiral arm that wound
in the opposite sense to the two others. I
immediately suspected that NGC 4622 has leading
spiral structure, a phenomenon which, up until
that time, had not been definitively recognized
in any galaxy.
It has long been believed that most spiral
arms seen in galaxies are trailing, meaning they
wind outward opposite the direction of rotation
of the disk material, something like what one
sees while stirring cream into a cup of coffee. A
leading arm does the opposite, opening outward
into the same direction as the rotation of the
galaxy's disk.
Byrd teamed up with colleague Buta in the
early 90s to try and solve the mystery of which
arm or arms lead in NGC 4622. To do this, they
had to determine which way the galaxy spins:
clockwise or counterclockwise on the sky.
Although they obtained much follow-up data with
telescopes in Chile, these ground-based data
could not answer this question.
The problem, said Freeman, is
that NGC 4622 is like a dinner plate on the table.
It is tipped very little to the line of sight.
Determining which arms lead in NGC 4622 requires
knowledge of which side of the galaxy is tipped
toward us and which half of the galaxy recedes
from us as the stars rotate around the center.
With our ground-based data, we were able
to determine which half recedes but we were
unable to determine which side is tipped toward
us. Hubble Space Telescope observations of this
galaxy were needed to determine which side is
nearer because they could show details previously
hidden from us by Earth's atmospheric blurring.
In particular, they show dark silhouettes of dust
clouds in the disk of the galaxy seen against the
starlight of the bright spherical central bulge
of stars.
Because the disk of NGC 4622 is slightly
tilted, one side is nearer to us than the other.
On the near side, we view the bulge through the
dust, while on the far side we view the dust
through the bulge. This difference makes the dust
silhouettes stand out more clearly on the near
side.
The effect is so obvious and unambiguous
in our images, Buta said, that we
knew the answer about which arms lead as soon as
we saw the HST images on our computer screen. The
answer was not, however, what we expected.
We had thought since 1993 that the outer
pair of arms trailed, said Byrd. These
two arms were strong and there were good
theoretical reasons to believe they were trailing.
However, in order for them to be trailing, the
galaxy would have to be spinning counterclockwise.
The Hubble Space Telescope data told us that the
galaxy was, in fact, spinning clockwise. This
gave the surprising result that the two outer
arms have the leading sense, not the weaker inner
arm. We were absolutely stunned by this result.
Why does NGC 4622 have two strong leading arms
when most galaxies have trailing arms? Byrd,
Buta, and Freeman think they know the answer.
We have suspected for a long time that NGC
4622 has suffered from some kind of interaction
with another galaxy, said Buta. Its
two outer arms are lopsided, meaning something
has disturbed it. The new HST images suggest, in
fact, that NGC 4622 has consumed a small
companion galaxy.
In the center we see new evidence for a
merger between NGC 4622 and a smaller galaxy.
This could be the key to understanding the
unusual leading arms, he said. This
research was supported by NASA and the National
Science Foundation.
|
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UA
and Bevill State astronomers captured this image
of spiral galaxy NGC4622 in May 2001, using
NASA's Hubble Space Telescope. The scientists are
presenting the image at the American Astronomical
Society meeting in Washington, D.C. These
observations, combined with Doppler shift
measurements, show conclusively that the two
bright outer spiral arms of the galaxy are
leading, meaning they spiral outward in the
direction of orbital motion (clockwise in this
image).
In
this image, north is toward the upper right and
east is toward the upper left.
More images of the galaxy
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