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For a downloadable photograph of the galaxy
with a cutline, go to: http://www.aoc.nrao.edu/epo/pr/2003/spiraljet/
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - Giant jets of subatomic particles moving
at nearly the speed of light have been found coming from
thousands of galaxies across the universe, but always from
elliptical galaxies or galaxies in the process of merging --
until now. Dr. Bill Keel, professor of astronomy at The
University of Alabama, led a research team that discovered a
huge jet coming from a spiral galaxy similar to our own Milky
Way.
“We’ve always thought spirals were the wrong kind of
galaxy to generate these huge jets, but now we’re going to
have to re-think some of our ideas on what produces these
jets,” Keel said.
Keel worked with Michael Ledlow of the Gemini Observatory in
Chile and Frazer Owen of the National Radio Astronomy
Observatory in New Mexico. The scientists reported their
findings at the American Astronomical Society’s meeting in
Seattle, Wash. on Jan. 8, 2003.
“Further study of this galaxy may provide unique insights
into just what needs to happen in a galaxy to produce these
powerful jets of particles,” Keel said.
The team used the combined power of three telescopes -- the
Hubble Space Telescope, the National Science Foundation’s Very
Large Array (VLA) in New Mexico and the 8-meter Gemini-South
Telescope in Chile.
Astronomers believe such jets originate at the cores of
galaxies, where super massive black holes provide the tremendous
gravitational energy that accelerates particles to nearly the
speed of light. Magnetic fields twisted tightly by spinning
disks of material being sucked into the black hole are presumed
to narrow the speeding particles into thin jets, like a nozzle
on a garden hose.
Both elliptical and spiral galaxies are believed to harbor
these super massive black holes at their cores.
The discovery that the jet was coming from a spiral galaxy,
dubbed 0313-192, required using a combination of radio, optical
and infrared observations to examine the galaxy and it
surroundings.
The story began more than 20 years ago when Owen began a
survey of 500 galaxy clusters using the National Science
Foundation’s VLA to make radio images of the clusters. In the
1990s, Ledlow joined the project, making optical-telescope
images of the same clusters as part of his research for a
doctoral dissertation at the University of New Mexico. An
optical image from New Mexico’s Kitt Peak National Observatory
gave a hint that this galaxy, clearly seen with a jet in the VLA
images, might be a spiral.
However, 0313-192 is nearly a billion light years from Earth,
and it proved an elusive target. Subsequent observations with
the VLA and the 3.5-meter telescope at Apache Point Observatory
supported the idea that the galaxy might be a spiral but were
inconclusive. In the spring of 2002, astronauts installed the
Advanced Camera for Surveys on the Hubble Space Telescope. This
new facility produced a richly detailed image of 0313-192,
showing that it is a dust-rich spiral seen almost exactly
edge-on.
“The finely-detailed Hubble image resolved any doubt and
proved that this galaxy is a spiral,” Ledlow said. Infrared
images with the Gemini-South telescope complemented the Hubble
images and further confirmed the galaxy’s spiral nature.
Now, the astronomers seek to understand why this one spiral
galaxy, unlike all others seen so far, is producing the bright
jets seen with the VLA and other radio telescopes. The
researchers feel several factors may have combined.
“This galaxy’s disk is twisted, and that may indicate
that it has been disturbed by a close passage of another galaxy
or may have swallowed up a companion dwarf galaxy,” Keel said.
“This galaxy shows signs of having a very massive black hole
at its core, and the jets are taking the shortest path out of
the galaxy’s own gas.”
0313-192 resides in a cluster of galaxies called Abell 428. The
scientists have discovered that Abell 428 is not a dense
cluster, but rather a loose collection of small groups of
galaxies.
In order to see the large jets so common to elliptical
galaxies, Owen said, “you may need pressure from a cluster’s
intergalactic medium to keep the particles and magnetic fields
from dispersing so rapidly that the jet can’t stay
together.”
However, a spiral won’t survive in a dense cluster. The
looser collection of galaxy groups that makes up Abell 428 may
be just the right environment to allow the spiral to survive but
still to provide the pressure needed to keep the jets together.
In any case, the scientists say the unique example provided
by this jet-producing spiral galaxy raises questions about some
basic assumptions regarding jet production in galaxies.
The National Radio Astronomy Observatory is a facility of the
National Science Foundation, operated under cooperative
agreement by Associated Universities Inc. The Space Telescope
Science Institute is operated by the Association of Universities
for Research in Astronomy Inc., for NASA, under contract with
the Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD. The Hubble Space
Telescope is a project of international cooperation between NASA
and the European Space Agency. Gemini is an international
partnership managed by the Association of Universities for
Research in Astronomy under a cooperative agreement with the
National Science Foundation.
The department of
physics and astronomy is part of the College
of Arts and Sciences, UA’s largest division and the
largest public liberal arts college in the state, with
approximately 5,000 undergraduate and 1,000 graduate students.
The College has received national recognition for academic
excellence, and A&S students have been selected for many of
the nation’s top academic honors, including 15 Rhodes
Scholarships, 13 Goldwater Scholarships, seven Truman
Scholarships and 11 memberships on USA Today’s Academic
All-American teams.
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