OUR GALAXY'S "SISTER" IS A CANNIBAL

The large spiral galaxy called Andromeda is devouring a couple of small
neighbouring dwarf galaxies, astronomers report in the July 5 issue of the
journal "Nature". The finding was made by Dr Rodrigo Ibata (Observatoire
de Strasbourg, France), Dr Michael Irwin (Institute of Astronomy,
Cambridge, UK), Dr Geraint Lewis (Anglo-Australian Observatory,
Australia), Dr Annette Ferguson (Kapteyn Institute, The Netherlands), and
Dr Nial Tanvir (University of Hertfordshire, UK) who used the 2.5-m Isaac
Newton Telescope on La Palma in the Canary Islands to make the first
sensitive panoramic survey of Andromeda.

The evidence of galactic dismemberment is a stream of stars on the
outskirts of Andromeda that appears to have been stripped from the dwarf
galaxies M32 and NGC 205 by their larger companion.

The finding supports the idea that big galaxies have been built up over time 
by smaller galaxies colliding and that this process is continuing today.

Andromeda is our Galaxy's "big sister", twice as large but otherwise very
similar. It is the nearest large galaxy, lying only 2.2 million
light-years away.

Astronomers have known for some years that our own Galaxy is a cannibal.
Its outer parts are threaded through with tell-tale streams of stars from
small galaxies it has engulfed.

Like a rat swallowed by a snake, stars of a swallowed galaxy stay as a
recognisable lump for billions of years before eventually mingling with 
those of their conqueror.

"This has given the outskirts of our Galaxy, its 'halo', a rather lumpy
structure," said team leader Dr Rodrigo Ibata. "We wanted to see if
Andromeda's halo was the same."

The new survey was possible only because the digital devices that have
replaced photography in astronomy have now been developed enough to cover
fairly large areas of sky. Even so, more than fifty long exposures had to
be pieced together to give a panorama of the halo on only one side of
Andromeda.

The ripped-off stars can be seen as a distinct stream. They can also be
distinguished from other stars in Andromeda's halo by their slightly
different chemical composition.

"Andromeda is close enough for us to be able to see individual stars
stripped from the satellite galaxies and measure their speeds. From this
we will be able to map the distribution of 'dark matter' in the halo
surrounding Andromeda," said team member Dr Geraint Lewis. "No-one has
been able to do this definitively before."

In the ultimate corporate merger, our Galaxy will collide with Andromeda
three billion years from now. Astronomers have known for almost a century
that the two galaxies are falling together at 500 000 kilometres an hour.

"Colliding with a dwarf galaxy is only like having a cream pie hit your
windscreen," Dr Lewis said. "When our Galaxy and Andromeda collide it'll
look like a car crash - very messy."

FOR MORE INFORMATION
Dr Rodrigo Ibata, Observatoire de Strasbourg, France
+33-3-90-242-391 (work), +33-3-88-457-694 (home)
Email: ibata@astro.u-strasbg.fr

Dr Michael Irwin, Institute of Astronomy, Cambridge, UK
+44-1223-337-548 (work), Email: mike@ast.cam.ac.uk

Dr Geraint Lewis, Anglo-Australian Observatory, Sydney, Australia
+1-808-961-3756 (observing at the James Clerk Maxwell Telescope, Hawaii,
from July 3)
+1-808-969-3333 (Naniloa Resort, Hawaii, from July 3)
Email: gfl@aaoepp.aao.gov.au

Dr Annette Ferguson, Kapteyn Institute, The Netherlands
+31-50-363-8234 (work), Email: ferguson@astro.rug.nl

Dr Nial Tanvir, University of Hertfordshire, UK
+44-1707-286-299 (work), +44-7980-136-499 (mob.)
+44-1763-241-841 (home), Email: nrt@star.herts.ac.uk

IMAGES:

ANDROMEDA
(Image copyright to Caltech)
http://www.aao.gov.au/images/captions/caltech_m31.html

(Image copyright to Jason Ware)
http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap991114.html

SIMULATED COLLISION OF OUR GALAXY WITH ANDROMEDA (by John Dubinski)
http://www.cita.utoronto.ca/%7Edubinski/tflops/

MERGER OF A SATELLITE GALAXY (7.1 Mb file)
http://burro.astr.cwru.edu/SSAnims/SATEDGE.mpg