ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY PRESS INFORMATION NOTE

 

**This material was distributed earlier under embargo to reporters and
the embargo having expired, is now sent to press officers.**

Ref.: PN 06/21 (NAM14)
 
Issued by RAS Communications Officers: 

 

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AND 

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National Astronomy Meeting Press Room (4 - 7 April only):
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CONTACT DETAILS ARE LISTED AT THE END OF THIS RELEASE.

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SLOW MOTION MERGERS IN GALAXY CLUSTERS PROVIDE CONDITIONS TO TRANSFORM
SPIRALS TO SMOOTH DISKS

 

Astronomers at Liverpool John Moores University may have solved the mystery
of how spiral galaxies in clusters are transformed over time into smooth
disks.  Results from a study of galaxy clusters confirm that the slow-motion
conditions needed for the transformation are occurring among populations of
galaxies falling towards the cluster centre.


Over the past several billion years the predominant shape of disc galaxies
in clusters has changed from a spiral to a smooth disk. Theory suggests that
this change occurs when two galaxies of unequal mass merge and gravitational
effects pull gas to the galaxies nucleus, sweeping away the spiral structure
and leaving behind a smooth, barren, thickened disk known as a lenticular
galaxy. However, galaxies orbiting in clusters move at high speeds and in
random directions, which should mean that conditions needed for these slow
interactions rarely occur. Instead, multiple rapid encounters between
galaxies, known as 'galaxy harassment', are dominant but these types of fast
encounters cannot easily form the smooth disks.


The group from Liverpool John Moores compared eight examples of populations
of galaxies falling towards the centres of galaxy clusters with control
samples of galaxies far from the clusters. They found that the infalling
galaxies in the cluster were predominantly distorted in shape and had a
higher than normal rates of star formation.  Between a half and
three-quarters of these galaxies were very close by to another galaxy or
appeared to be merging with a companion galaxy, which suggested that
interactions and mergers are more common in galaxies falling into the
cluster than in the control sample.


"Our findings are very exciting because these results suggest that galaxies
are more likely to merge when falling into a cluster and this may explain
why clusters today have so few spirals and so many lenticular galaxies,"
said Dr Chris Moss, who will be presenting the results at the Royal
Astronomical Society's National Astronomy Meeting on the 5th April.


The results suggest the conditions needed for slow galaxy interactions and
mergers are more likely to occur in galaxies falling into a galaxy cluster
compared to the general population of galaxies outside clusters.


Since infalling of galaxies into clusters was greater in the past, such
interactions and mergers may have contributed significantly to the
transformation of the past population of cluster spirals to lenticular
galaxies in present-day clusters.


The observations were carried out over the past several years using the JKT
(Jacobus Kapteyn Telescope) and the Nordic Optical telescope, La Palma based
on earlier survey work using the Burrell Schmidt Telescope, Kitt Peak
National Observatory.


NOTES FOR EDITORS


The 2006 RAS National Astronomy Meeting is hosted by the University of
Leicester. It is sponsored by the Royal Astronomical Society, the UK
Particle Physics and Astronomy Research Council (PPARC), the University of
Leicester and the National Space Centre, Leicester.


IMAGES:

For images, see:

http://www.astro.livjm.ac.uk/press/chrismoss.html


1. Cluster: Abell 347, galaxy CGCG 538-043

2. Cluster Abell 426, galaxy CGCG 540-112 = IC 316

3. Cluster Abell 1367, galaxy CGCG 127-012

CONTACTS

Chris Moss
Astrophysics Research Institute, Liverpool John Moores University Twelve
Quays House, Egerton Wharf Birkenhead, CH41 1LD, United Kingdom
Tel: 0151 231 2902
Mobile: 07760 253 992
Fax: 0151 231 2921
E-mail: cmm@astro.livjm.ac.uk 

>From Wednesday 4th to Friday 7th April, Dr Moss can be contacted through the
NAM press office (see details at the top of the release)

Claire Thomas
Astrophysics Research Institute, Liverpool John Moores University Twelve
Quays House, Egerton Wharf Birkenhead, CH41 1LD, United Kingdom
Tel: 0151 231 2905
Fax: 0151 231 2921
E-mail: cft@astro.livjm.ac.uk 

Phil James
Astrophysics Research Institute, Liverpool John Moores University Twelve
Quays House, Egerton Wharf Birkenhead, CH41 1LD, United Kingdom
Tel: 0151 231 2916
Fax: 0151 231 2921
E-mail: paj@astro.livjm.ac.uk