Why the Milky Way may be facing a midlife crisis
Our Milky Way galaxy and its neighbour, the Andromeda galaxy, seem to
be going through a midlife crisis.
New research reveals that both galaxies are in the middle of
transitioning from young, star-forming regions into older, stagnant
ones, a transition that is revealed by the galaxies' colour. Generally,
such a change comes after two galaxies collide, astronomers said, but
this pair seems to be making the shift on its own.
In galaxies, star formation rates and colour are closely related.
But, analyses of the shade of the Milky Way are surprisingly rare.
A team of Australian astronomers, led by Simon Mutch, of the
Swinburne University of Technology in Melbourne, sought to determine the
colour the Milky Way and the nearby spiral Andromeda galaxy.
Too young to feel this old
Instead of the young, active signs they expected, the astronomers
determined that both galaxies are not the typical blue or red colour,
but instead, fall in an in-between state of green.Scientists have long
regarded the Milky Way as a "typical" spiral galaxy, but in regards to
colour, the galaxy doesn't quite follow the standard model.
"Green galaxies are commonly thought to represent galaxies which are
undergoing the transition from being young, dynamic, energetic,
star-forming blue galaxies to being old, lethargic red galaxies," Mutch
told SPACE.com in an email interview.
"In terms of a human being, this transitional phase could be thought
of being akin to a midlife crisis."Astronomers can't figure out the
colour of the Milky Way easily by examining it from the inside, because
the position of the sun within the galaxy makes it a challenge.
"Determining the state of our own galaxy, while we're stuck inside
it, is very difficult to do," Mutch said. "The phrase 'hard to see the
forest for the trees' rings true here. When we look at the galaxy, much
of it is obscured from our view by intervening gas and dust."
Viewing the Milky Way from the outside
To peek inside, Mutch and his team studied the mass of stars, the
rate of star formation and the brightness and colour of the stars within
the two galaxies. These measurements provide a snapshot of the galactic
pair.
The astronomers then modeled how galaxies grow, selecting an
evolutionary track that fulfilled several of the properties of the Milky
Way and Andromeda galaxies today.
Now, instead of looking at the galaxy from the inside, the team was
able to get a glimpse from the outside instead, which gave them a clear
view of the colour.
Star formation dominates in blue galaxies, where the glow of young
stars gives a galaxy its shine. As the stars die, they explode in
supernova blasts that distribute gas throughout the galaxy, which is
then recycled into newborn stars.
But galaxies aren't sitting quietly; they are constantly moving in
the expanding universe. When galaxies collide, gas flows into the black
hole at the newly merged center.
The resulting active galactic nucleus, or AGN, is among the brightest
radio signals in the universe, and can be seen across great distances.
Because it consumes the gas that baby stars need, the AGN slows star
formation, and the galaxy loses its blue hue and gradually shifts to
red, the astronomers said.
But the Milky Way and the Andromeda galaxy are shifting from blue to
red without a collision, which was a surprising discovery, the
researchers explained.
Since they are already slowing down, when they crash into each other
in the future, the collision most likely won't generate a new
powerhouse.
"Our finding that both the Milky Way and Andromeda are green suggests
that there will be little cold gas left in both these galaxies when they
merge sometime in the next 5 bil
- The Independent
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