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Omaroo
05-02-2008, 08:51 AM
Direct from my contact at ATNF - CSIRO Narrabri!!
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5 February 2008
Ref 08/16

GAS 'FINGER' POINTS TO GALAXIES' FUTURE

Like a fork piercing a fried egg, a giant finger of hydrogen gas is poking through our Milky Way Galaxy from outside, astronomers using CSIRO radio telescopes at Parkes and Narrabri have found.

The location of the intrusion may give a crucial clue to the fate of the little galaxies the gas flows from, the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds.

"We're thrilled, because we can determine exactly where this gas is ploughing into the Milky Way - it's usually extremely hard to get distances to such gas features," said the research team leader, Dr Naomi McClure-Griffiths of CSIRO's Australia Telescope National Facility.

The gas finger, called HVC306-2+230, is running into the starry disk of our Galaxy about 70 thousand light-years (21kpc) away from us. On the sky, the point of contact is near the Southern Cross.

The finger is the pointy end of the so-called Leading Arm of gas that streams ahead of the Magellanic Clouds towards the Milky Way.

Until last year, astronomers generally thought that the Magellanic Clouds had orbited our Galaxy many times, and were doomed to be ripped apart and swallowed by their gravitational overlord.

But then new Hubble Space Telescope measurements showed the Clouds were moving much faster than previously thought. In turn, this implied that the Clouds are paying our Galaxy a one-time visit rather than being its long-term companions.

Knowing where the Leading Arm is crossing the Galactic Disk may help astronomers to predict where the Clouds themselves will go in future.

"We think the Leading Arm is a tidal feature, gas pulled out of the Magellanic Clouds by the Milky Way's gravity," said Dr
McClure-Griffiths.

"Where this gas goes, we'd expect the Clouds to follow, at least approximately."

The team's measurement of where the Leading Arm intrudes into the Milky Way is more in line with the models that assume the Magellanic Clouds have been orbiting our Galaxy than with the models that have the Clouds just passing by.

Dr McClure-Griffiths cautions that this is not the final word on the subject, saying that the latter models were far from ruled out.

But the new result suggests that the Magellanic Clouds will eventually merge with the Milky Way, rather than zooming past.

Publication: N. M. McClure-Griffiths et al. "An Interaction of a Magellanic Leading Arm High Velocity Cloud with the Milky Way Disk." Astrophysical Journal Letters; Vol 673 No L143; 1 February 2008.

Image available at: www.scienceimage.csiro.au/mediarelease/mr08-16.html (http://www.scienceimage.csiro.au/mediarelease/mr08-16.html)

Further Information:
Dr Naomi McClure-Griffiths, Australia Telescope National Facility: 02
9372 4321; 0413 299 077; naomi.mcclure-griffiths@csiro.au

Media Assistance:
Helen Sim, Australia Telescope National Facility: 02 9372 4251; 0419 635
905; helen.sim@csiro.au

madtuna
05-02-2008, 10:11 AM
Very interesting....thanks Chris

glenc
06-02-2008, 04:02 AM
The ABC also has this story at:
http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2008/02/05/2155253.htm

MrB
07-02-2008, 05:06 PM
Yes very interesting.
Only slightly relative: I often wonder, had our Solar system been in one of the Magellanic clouds instead of the Milky Way, what our night sky would look like with that massive face-on galaxy over our heads!

Argonavis
09-02-2008, 02:45 PM
The question is almost rhetorical. The answer is, of course, fairly spectacular.

Assuming we lived in the LMC (rather more likely than living in the SMC with its smaller number of stars possessing Earth like planets) then Wiki (FWIW) has saved me from working out the numbers:

"From a viewpoint in the LMC, the Milky Way would be a spectacular sight. The galaxy's total apparent magnitude would be -2.0—over 14 times brighter than the LMC appears to us on Earth—and it would span about 36° across the sky, which is the width of over 70 full moons. Furthermore, because of the LMC's high galactic latitude, an observer there would get an oblique view of the entire galaxy, free from the interference of interstellar dust which makes studying in the Milky Way's plane difficult from Earth.[17] The Small Magellanic Cloud would be about magnitude 0.6, substantially brighter than the LMC appears to us."

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Large_Magellanic_Cloud

But even a magnitudde -2.0 object, spread over 36 degrees, would alas still be washed away by anthropogenic light pollution.


I could well imagine that whilst many familiar deep sky objects such as M42 would be much fainter and smaller, there would be many many more objects visible from the perspective of the Clouds that are currently hidden from us due to interstellar dust in the plane of the Milky Way.

MrB
10-02-2008, 08:42 PM
Nice find! I never even considered looking for it, just didn't think it would exist.

That wouldn't worry me, 'coz we'd have the Tarantula!

EDIT:
Actually, maybe thats not such a good idea:

Wikipedia:
The Tarantula Nebula has an apparent magnitude (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apparent_magnitude) of 8. Considering its distance of about 160,000 light years (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Light_year), this is an extremely luminous object. Its luminosity is so bright that if it were as close to Earth as the Orion Nebula, the Tarantula Nebula would cast shadows.

Shadows?.... skyglow...