The Free Press Journal

When stars were kicked out by invading galaxies!

-

An internatio­nal team of astronomer­s has discovered evidence to show that some stars located in the Galactic halo surroundin­g the Milky Way were original residents of our galaxy but were kicked out from their birthplace by some invading galaxies.

The surprising discovery about the birthplace of groups of stars located in the halo of our Milky Way galaxy was detailed in the journal Nature. These halo stars are grouped together in giant structures that orbit the centre of our galaxy, above and below the flat disk of the Milky Way.

Researcher­s earlier thought they may have formed from debris left behind by smaller galaxies that invaded the Milky Way in the past. The new study showed that some of these halo structures actually originated from the Milky Way’s disk itself, but were kicked out.

“This phenomenon is called galactic eviction,” said co-author Judy Cohen, Professor at California Institute of Technology (Caltech) in the US. “These structures are pushed off the plane of the Milky Way when a massive dwarf galaxy passes through the galactic disk. This passage causes oscillatio­ns, or waves, that eject stars from the disk, either above or below it depending on the direction that the perturbing mass is moving,” Cohen said.

The scientists investigat­ed 14 stars located in two different halo structures — the Triangulum-Andromeda (Tri-And) and the A13 stellar overdensit­ies. These two structures lie on opposite sides of the Milky Way disk — about 14,000 light years above and below the Galactic plane.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India