December 1, 2023
2 mins read

Astronomers find giant stream of stars running between galaxies

With large future telescopes, the researchers not only hope to discover new giant streams, they also want to zoom in on the Giant Coma Stream itself…reports Asian Lite News

An international team of researchers has discovered the largest-ever giant and extremely faint stream of stars running between galaxies.

The observations were made with University of California-Los Angeles astronomer Michael Rich’s relatively small 70-centimetre telescope in the US and using the 4.2-metre William Herschel telescope at La Palma, Spain.

After image processing, they saw an extremely faint stream more than 10 times the length of our Milky Way.

Named the Giant Coma Stream, it appeared to float in the middle of the cluster environment, not associated with any galaxy in particular, said the researchers in the paper published in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics.

“This giant stream crossed our path by coincidence,” said lead researcher Javier Roman, associated with the University of Groningen in the Netherlands and the University of La Laguna in Spain.

“We were studying halos of stars located around large galaxies.”

The discovery of the Giant Coma Stream is remarkable because it is a rather fragile structure amid a hostile environment of mutually attracting and repelling galaxies.

“Meanwhile, we have been able to simulate such huge flows in the computer. We therefore expect to find more of them. For example, if we search with the future 39-metre ELT and when Euclid starts producing data,” said co-author Reynier Peletier from University of Groningen.

With large future telescopes, the researchers not only hope to discover new giant streams, they also want to zoom in on the Giant Coma Stream itself.

“We would love to observe individual stars in and near the stream and learn more about dark matter,” Peletier said.

The Coma Cluster is one of the best-studied clusters of galaxies. It contains thousands of galaxies at a distance of about 300 million light-years from Earth in the direction of the northern constellation Coma Berenices.

In 1933, Swiss astronomer Fritz Zwicky showed that the galaxies in the cluster move too fast if you only take the amount of visible matter into account. He figured out that there must be dark matter that keeps things together. The exact nature of dark matter is still unknown.

ALSO READ-Astronomers detect new planet orbiting Proxima Centauri

Previous Story

India, China Hold Meeting of Mechanism For Consultation

Next Story

India Topped SE Asia in Malaria Cases and Deaths: WHO

Latest from -Top News

New York Honours Indian Constitution

The New York State Senate passed a resolution marking 75 years of the Indian Constitution, introduced by Senator Jeremy Cooney, highlighting shared democratic values with the U.S….reports Asian Lite News The New

Demining support transforms Cambodia

Director for South-East Asia and Pacific, Charles Hay is visiting Cambodia to see the positive impact of the UK’s Global Mine Action Programme   FCDO Director for South-East Asia and Pacific, Charles

UK-Angola trade mission strengthens ties

British businesses explore Angola’s crucial sectors, forging partnerships for continued sustainable growth Ambassador Bharat Joshi welcomed UK Trade Envoy Calvin Bailey and a delegation of over 20 UK businesses eager to explore

Senior general appointed new Royal Navy chief in UK

Gen. Sir Gwyn Jenkins also faced allegations that he oversaw the rejection of hundreds of resettlement applications from former Afghan special forces members who served alongside British troops against the Taliban The
Go toTop

Don't Miss

Astronomers detect new planet orbiting Proxima Centauri

Proxima b was discovered a few years ago using the