Galactic Wrecks Far from Earth: These images from NASA's Hubble Space Telescope's ACS in 2004 and 2005 show four examples of interacting galaxies far away from Earth. The galaxies, beginning at far left, are shown at various stages of the merger process. The top row displays merging galaxies found in different regions of a large survey known as the AEGIS. More detailed views are in the bottom row of images. (Credit: NASA; ESA; J. Lotz, STScI; M. Davis, University of California, Berkeley; and A. Koekemoer, STScI)
A new analysis of Hubble
surveys, combined with simulations of galaxy interactions, reveals that the
merger rate of galaxies over the last 8 billion to 9 billion years falls
between the previous estimates.
The
galaxy merger rate is one of the fundamental measures of galaxy evolution,
yielding clues to how galaxies bulked up over time through encounters with
other galaxies. And yet, a huge discrepancy exists over how often galaxies
coalesced in the past. Measurements of galaxies in deep-field surveys made by
NASA's Hubble Space Telescope generated a broad range of results: anywhere from
5 percent to 25 percent of the galaxies were merging.
The study, led by Jennifer Lotz of the Space
Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore , Md. , analyzed galaxy
interactions at different distances, allowing the astronomers to compare
mergers over time. Lotz's team found that galaxies gained quite a bit of mass
through collisions with other galaxies. Large galaxies merged with each other
on average once over the past 9 billion years. Small galaxies were coalescing
with large galaxies more frequently. In one of the first measurements of
smashups between dwarf and massive galaxies in the distant universe, Lotz's
team found these mergers happened three times more often than encounters
between two hefty galaxies.
"Having an accurate value for the merger
rate is critical because galactic collisions may be a key process that drives
galaxy assembly, rapid star formation at early times, and the accretion of gas
onto central supermassive black holes at the centers of galaxies," Lotz
explains.
The team's results are accepted for publication
appeared inThe Astrophysical Journal.
The problem with previous Hubble estimates is
that astronomers used different methods to count the mergers.
"These different techniques probe mergers
at different 'snapshots' in time along the merger process," Lotz says.
"It is a little bit like trying to count car crashes by taking snapshots.
If you look for cars on a collision course, you will only see a few of them. If
you count up the number of wrecked cars you see afterwards, you will see many
more. Studies that looked for close pairs of galaxies that appeared ready to
collide gave much lower numbers of mergers than those that searched for
galaxies with disturbed shapes, evidence that they're in smashups."
To figure out how many encounters happen over
time, Lotz needed to understand how long merging galaxies would look like
"wrecks" before they settle down and begin to look like normal
galaxies again.
That's why Lotz and her team turned to highly
detailed computer simulations to help make sense of the Hubble photographs. The
team made simulations of the many possible galaxy collision scenarios and then
mapped them to Hubble images of galaxy interactions.
Creating the computer models was a
time-consuming process. Lotz's team tried to account for a broad range of
merger possibilities, from a pair of galaxies with equal masses joining
together to an interaction between a giant galaxy and a puny one. The team also
analyzed different orbits for the galaxies, possible collision impacts, and how
galaxies were oriented to each other. In all, the group came up with 57
different merger scenarios and studied the mergers from 10 different viewing
angles. "Viewing the simulations was akin to watching a slow-motion car
crash," Lotz says.
The simulations followed the galaxies for 2
billion to 3 billion years, beginning at the first encounter and continuing
until the union was completed, about a billion years later.
"Our simulations offer a realistic picture
of mergers between galaxies," Lotz says.
In addition to studying the smashups between
giant galaxies, the team also analyzed encounters among puny galaxies. Spotting
collisions with small galaxies are difficult because the objects are so dim
relative to their larger companions.
"Dwarf galaxies are the most common galaxy
in the universe," Lotz says. "They may have contributed to the
buildup of large galaxies. In fact, our own Milky Way galaxy had several such
mergers with small galaxies in its recent past, which helped to build up the
outer regions of its halo. This study provides the first quantitative
understanding of how the number of galaxies disturbed by these minor mergers changed
with time."
Lotz compared her simulation images with
pictures of thousands of galaxies taken from some of Hubble's largest surveys,
including the All-Wavelength Extended Groth Strip International Survey (AEGIS),
the Cosmological Evolution Survey (COSMOS), and the Great Observatories Origins
Deep Survey (GOODS), as well as mergers identified by the DEEP2 survey with the
W.M. Keck Observatory in Hawaii . She and other groups
had identified about a thousand merger candidates from these surveys but
initially found very different merger rates.
"When we applied what we learned from the
simulations to the Hubble surveys in our study, we derived much more consistent
results," Lotz says.
Her next goal is to analyze galaxies that were
interacting around 11 billion years ago, when star formation across the
universe peaked, to see if the merger rate rises along with the star formation
rate. A link between the two would mean galaxy encounters incite rapid star
birth.
In addition to Lotz, the coauthors of the paper
include Patrik Jonsson of Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in
Cambridge, Mass; T. J. Cox of Carnegie Observatories in Pasadena, Calif.;
Darren Croton of the Centre for Astrophysics and Supercomputing at Swinburne
University of Technology in Hawthorn, Australia; Joel R. Primack of the
University of California, Santa Cruz; Rachel S. Somerville of the Space
Telescope Science Institute and The Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Md.;
and Kyle Stewart of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif.
The Hubble Space Telescope is a project of
international cooperation between NASA and the European Space Agency. NASA's
Goddard Space Flight Center manages the telescope. The Space Telescope Science
Institute (STScI) conducts Hubble science operations. STScI is operated for
NASA by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, Inc., in Washington , D.C.

No comments:
Post a Comment