Science Largest galaxy ever discovered baffles scientists - Some giant radio galaxy has been found

  • 🏰 The Fediverse is up. If you know, you know.
  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
Article (Archive)

Astronomers just found the largest galaxy ever discovered, and they have no idea how it got so big.

At 16.3 million light-years wide, the Alcyoneus galaxy has a diameter 160 times wider than the Milky Way and four times that of the previous title holder, IC 1101, which spans 3.9 million light-years, researchers reported in a new study. Named after one of the mythical giants who fought Hercules and whose name means "mighty ass" in Greek, Alcyoneus is roughly 3 billion light-years from Earth.

The galactic monster is an especially large example of a radio galaxy, or a galaxy with a supermassive black hole at the center which gobbles up enormous amounts of matter before spitting it out — sending gigantic two jets of plasma moving at close to the speed of light. After traveling millions of light-years, the plasma beams slow, spreading out into plumes that emit light in the form of radio waves. In the case of Alcyoneus, its lobes are the largest ever discovered.

Galaxies that sport gigantic, plasma-filled radio lobes aren't new (even the Milky Way has two small plumes), but how Alcyoneus, a relatively ordinary galaxy at its center, was able to grow such monstrously huge plumes is a mystery to scientists. The researchers released their findings, which have been accepted for publication in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics, Feb. 11 on the preprint server arXiv.

"We have discovered what is in projection the largest known structure made by a single galaxy – a giant radio galaxy with a projected proper length [of] 4.99 ± 0.04 megaparsecs [16.28 million light-years]. The true proper length is at least … 5.04 ± 0.05 megaparsecs [16.44 million light-years]," the researchers, led by Martijn Oei, an astronomer at Leiden Observatory in the Netherlands, wrote in the study.

The researchers first spotted the new galactic heavyweight after poring through data collected by the Low Frequency Array (LOFAR), a network made by connecting roughly 20,000 radio telescopes distributed across 52 locations in Europe. After processing the data to detect only large and diffuse radio lobes, Oei spotted the enormous structure by accident.

But other than its gigantic plumes, Alcyoneus is a normal elliptical galaxy, with a total mass roughly 240 billion times the mass of the sun (half that of the Milky Way's) and a central supermassive black hole 400 million times the sun's mass (100 times less massive than the largest black hole). In fact, Alcyoneus' center is on the small side compared with those of most radio galaxies.

And it wasn't just Alcyoneus' mass that was oddly run-of-the-mill.

"Beyond geometry, Alcyoneus and its host [galactic center] are suspiciously ordinary: the total low-frequency luminosity density, stellar mass and supermassive black hole mass are all lower than, though similar to, those of the medial giant radio galaxies," the researchers wrote in their study. "Thus, very massive galaxies or central black holes are not necessary to grow large giants, and, if the observed state is representative of the source over its lifetime, neither is high radio power."

For now, the astronomers are stumped, but they are investigating some potential explanations. One possibility is that the galaxy's surrounding environment has a lower density than is usual, enabling its jets to expand across unprecedented scales. Another possible explanation is that Alcyoneus exists inside a filament of the cosmic web, a vast and little-understood structure of gas and dark matter that links galaxies.

The researchers say that finding out what is causing Alcyoneus to balloon in size will be useful for figuring out how other galaxies grow too. "If there exist host galaxy characteristics that are an important cause for giant radio galaxy growth, then the hosts of the largest giant radio galaxies are likely to possess them," the researchers wrote. "Similarly, if there exist particular large-scale environments that are highly conducive to giant radio galaxy growth, then the largest giant radio galaxies are likely to reside in them."
 
Dude how the FUCK are there no intelligent life we have found yet? Are we the dumbasses on the wrong frequency?
 
Astronomers hear the first transmissions from the Radio Galaxy...

"Hey, hey, my, my I'm the biggest galaxy in the sky"
 
But does Alcyoneus have galaxy-sized mechas yet?
gurren-lagann-space.gif
149424.gif
 
Dude how the FUCK are there no intelligent life we have found yet? Are we the dumbasses on the wrong frequency?
Because going faster than light really is pretty hard and probably impossible to solve

And they're finding out interstellar space isn't truly empty but for a few molecules here and there, there's all kinds of comets and cosmic trash floating around in between star systems that are a few light years apart (like Alpha Centauri and our solar system) and probably a good bit way out in the void between stars as well

So any awien probes puttering along at slower than light speeds exploring around might get whacked by all this natural space junk trying to make an approach to the sun and its planets
 
Honestly I hope a rogue planet approaches us I hope the first time we hear of it is radio signals asking those of us in the void of space for peaceful communication as they experience a life ending event that sends them hurtling towards us in horrid destruction. Lol people disagree they are in space right now I have truly found the rock bottom of intelligence
 
Back
Top Bottom