Astronomers discover Milky Way galaxy's most-distant stars
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[January 13, 2023]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Astronomers have detected in the stellar halo
that represents the Milky Way's outer limits a group of stars more
distant from Earth than any known within our own galaxy - almost halfway
to a neighboring galaxy.
The researchers said these 208 stars inhabit the most remote reaches of
the Milky Way's halo, a spherical stellar cloud dominated by the
mysterious invisible substance called dark matter that makes itself
known only through its gravitational influence. The furthest of them is
1.08 million light years from Earth. A light year is the distance light
travels in a year, 5.9 trillion miles (9.5 trillion km).
These stars, spotted using the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope on
Hawaii's Mauna Kea mountain, are part of a category of stars called RR
Lyrae that are relatively low mass and typically have low abundances of
elements heavier than hydrogen and helium. The most distant one appears
to have a mass about 70% that of our sun. No other Milky Way stars have
been confidently measured farther away than these.
The stars that populate the outskirts of the galactic halo can be viewed
as stellar orphans, probably originating in smaller galaxies that later
collided with the larger Milky Way.
"Our interpretation about the origin of these distant stars is that they
are most likely born in the halos of dwarf galaxies and star clusters
which were later merged - or more straightforwardly, cannibalized - by
the Milky Way," said Yuting Feng, an astronomy doctoral student at the
University of California, Santa Cruz, who led the study, presented this
week at an American Astronomical Society meeting in Seattle.
"Their host galaxies have been gravitationally shredded and digested,
but these stars are left at that large distance as debris of the merger
event," Feng added.
The Milky Way has grown over time through such calamities.
"The larger galaxy grows by eating smaller galaxies - by eating its own
kind," said study co-author Raja GuhaThakurta, UC Santa Cruz's chair of
astronomy and astrophysics.
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A meteor is photographed near the Milky
Way during the annual Perseid meteor shower in Pico de las Nieves,
on the island of Gran Canaria, Spain, August 13, 2021. REUTERS/Borja
Suarez
Containing an inner and outer layer, the Milky Way's halo is vastly
larger than the galaxy's main disk and central bulge that are
teeming with stars. The galaxy, with a supermassive black hole at
its center about 26,000 light years from Earth, contains perhaps 100
billion–400 billion stars including our sun, which resides in one of
the four primary spiral arms that make up the Milky Way's disk. The
halo contains about 5% of the galaxy's stars.
Dark matter, which dominates the halo, makes up most of the
universe's mass and is thought to be responsible for its basic
structure, with its gravity influencing visible matter to come
together and form stars and galaxies.
The halo's remote outer edge is a poorly understood region of the
galaxy. These newly identified stars are almost half the distance to
the Milky Way's neighboring Andromeda galaxy.
"We can see that the suburbs of the Andromeda halo and the Milky Way
halo are really extended - and are almost 'back-to-back,'" Feng
said.
The search for life beyond the Earth focuses on rocky planets akin
to Earth orbiting in what is called the "habitable zone" around
stars. More than 5,000 planets beyond our solar system, called
exoplanets, already have been discovered.
"We don't know for sure, but each of these outer halo stars should
be about as likely to have planets orbiting them as the sun and
other sun-like stars in the Milky Way," GuhaThakurta said.
(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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