Astronomers Spot Dazzling Galactic Collision

Astronomers Spot Dazzling Galactic Collision

Most galaxies in the observable universe have a comfortable buffer from their neighbors, but that’s not the case for NGC 4568 and NGC 4567. A new image from the Gemini North observatory in Hawaii shows these enormous spiral galaxies barreling into each other in a preview of what may await our own Milky Way galaxy in a billion years or so.

Gemini North is one of two 8.1-meter telescopes that make up the Gemini Observatory, which is under the purview of the National Science Foundation (NSF). The other is in Chile, which gives this project the ability to observe the entire sky. Astronomers recently pointed Gemini North at the constellation Virgo and focused on events some 60 million light years away. That’s where NGC 4568 (above, bottom) and NGC 4567 (above, top) are visible in the early stages of a galactic merger.

According to the NSF, the centers of these galaxies are still about 20,000 light years apart. That’s about the distance between Earth and the galactic center. Gravity will inexorably draw these galaxies together, guiding them into a series of ever-tightening loops until they become one. Along the way, the elegant spiral will be distorted as clouds of gas interact, condense, and kick off a tumultuous new era of star formation.

The image shows this collision as it was 60 million light years ago, but the merger won’t be complete for around half a billion years. At that point, astronomers believe NGC 4568 and NGC 4567 will have become a single large elliptical galaxy like the nearby galaxy Messier 89. That galaxy shows very little new star formation, consisting mostly of ancient low-mass stars and decaying globular clusters. If this is what’s in store for NGC 4568 and NGC 4567, it could be our future as well.

Astronomers Spot Dazzling Galactic Collision

Also visible in the new image is a bright point of light near the center of NGC 4568. This is the afterglow of a massive supernova cataloged as SN 2020fqv. It was detected in 2020, and the region is still brighter than all the surrounding objects.

None of us will be around to see the rest of this cosmic dance, but studying NGC 4568 and NGC 4567 at this early stage could shed light on the future of our galaxy. The current consensus is that the Milky Way is on a collision course with the Andromeda galaxy, and they may have interacted at least once in the past. As these are both spiral galaxies, the outcome could be very much like what we see happening 60 million light years away.

Continue reading

Astronomers Spot Earth-Sized Rogue Planet Wandering the Galaxy
Astronomers Spot Earth-Sized Rogue Planet Wandering the Galaxy

Astronomers have identified more than 4,000 exoplanets orbiting other stars but just a few "rogue planets" wandering the galaxy without a star to call home. A new study claims to have spotted one of these worlds, and it may be a small, rocky world like Earth.

Astronomers Might Finally Know the Source of Fast Radio Bursts
Astronomers Might Finally Know the Source of Fast Radio Bursts

A trio of new studies report on an FRB within our own galaxy. Because this one was so much closer than past signals, scientists were able to track it to a particular type of neutron star known as a magnetar.

Astronomers Have Detected a Planet’s Radio Emissions 51 Light-Years Away
Astronomers Have Detected a Planet’s Radio Emissions 51 Light-Years Away

The researchers claim this marks the first time an exoplanet has been detected in the radio bands.

Astronomers Spot Potentially Artificial Radio Signal From Nearby Star
Astronomers Spot Potentially Artificial Radio Signal From Nearby Star

We don't yet know what this signal is, but there's a (very) small chance it could have alien origins.