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Science Friday
Baby Milky Way modeled
Researchers unveil state-of-the-art simulation of galaxy formation
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GALACTIC GROWTHThis snapshot of a state-of-the-art simulation shows the flow of gas into a fledgling galaxy. Streams of cold gas (blue) flow onto the edge of the fledgling galaxy’s disk, while shock-heated gas (red) surrounds the disk. Gas enriched in metal content (green) by supernova explosions is stripped from smaller galaxies interacting with the hot dark matter halo and the cold gas stream. B. Moore, Oscar Agertz and Romain Teyssier/University of Zurich

View a video of galaxy formation in motion at the bottom of this article.

BLOIS,  France — Like a proud papa  showing off a picture of his newborn, cosmologist Ben Moore of the University of Zurich  in Switzerland  displayed an image of a galaxy that he says looks just like a newborn Milky  Way. These days, with the sharp eye of Hubble and other telescopes, that may  not sound like much of a feat. But the image Moore unveiled June 23 at the Windows on the  Universe meeting was produced in a supercomputer and is the highest-resolution  simulation ever attempted of a galaxy’s assembly.

Moore and his colleagues put in all the raw  ingredients and detailed interactions that are generally agreed to be essential  for galaxy formation. The simulation incorporates a halo of dark matter — the  invisible material that provides the scaffolding for pulling together visible  material — as well as hydrogen and helium gases and forces acting on these  materials, such as shock waves from exploding stars.

“The complexity we find is very beautiful,”  Moore says. As  time unfolded, the simulation, which begins shortly after the Big Bang and ends  when the universe is about 2 billion years old, produced a real-looking spiral  galaxy, akin in mass and shape to a young Milky Way.

“For the first time we’ve resolved individual  molecular clouds, the hot [dark matter] halo and cold streams of gas that  travel like a river” along dark matter filaments into the center of the  fledgling galaxy, Moore  says. The cold gas turns out to be essential for forming the bulge of stars at  the galaxy’s core.

The model isn’t perfect, Moore notes. It produces a stellar bulge that  is about three times as massive as the Milky Way’s. 


This movie models how a galaxy acquires most of its gas — the raw material for making stars. Red is hot gas, blue shows the cold streams of gas that flow like a river toward the galaxy’s center, and green shows gas that has been stripped out of satellite galaxies and enriched in metal content by supernova explosions.

Credit: B. Moore, Oscar Agertz and Romain Teyssier/University of Zurich


Found in: Atom & Cosmos
Comments 4
  • Einstein already told, what a massive/density planet, time is going to be more slow!

    Why Einstein never give that idea for physics of particle?

    What a massive/density particle, time is going to be more slow and thats why particle dont emit so fast energy.

    When neutrinos come out from sun, they are hot/density. The new neutrinos time is slow. First neutrinos emit energy%uFEFF slow. Later neutrinos emit energy faster. When neutrinos are here, near earth, they give some kineticenergy for our nucleus of atoms. When neutrinos are inside gasplanets, they emit more energy (kineticenergy) for gasplanets nucleus of atoms. This is relativity of real!

    Sun exploding and pushing exploding planets far away from exploding Sun!

    Space dont expanding or curving. Nucleus of atoms are expanding/exploding and emit energywaves who have a nature of electrons and particle, who also expanding and emit energy. Electrons just move to next exploding nucleus of atoms and get this exploding faster etc. Before that electrons just give some change of pressure for energywaves who pushing themselfs out from exploding nucleus of atoms!

    THIS IDEA IS REVOLUTION OF SCIENCE!
    change of pressure change of pressure
    Jun. 26, 2009 at 7:20am
  • If you like to read more this new idea.

    [Link was removed]
    change of pressure change of pressure
    Jun. 26, 2009 at 7:21am
  • Dark energy?

    Energy-Mass Superposition
    The Fractal Oneness Of The Universe


    The universe is the archetype of quantum within classical physics, which is the fractal oneness of the universe.

    Astronomically there are two physics, a classical physics behaviour of and between galactic clusters, and a quantum physics behaviour WITHIN the galactic clusters.

    The onset of big-bang's inflation, the cataclysmic resolution of the Original Superposition, started gravity, with formation - by dispersion - of galactic clusters that behave as classical Newtonian bodies and continuously reconvert their original pre-inflation masses back to energy, thus fueling the galactic clusters expansion, and with endless quantum-within-classical intertwined evolutions WITHIN the clusters in attempts to delay-resist this reconversion.


    Dov Henis
    (Comments from 22nd century)
    [Link was removed]
    On Energy, Mass, Gravity, Galaxies Clusters, AND Life
    A Commonsensible Recapitulation
    [Link was removed] #2125
    Updated Life's Manifest May 2009
    [Link was removed] #entry412704
    [Link was removed] #2321
    Dov Henis Dov Henis
    Jul. 5, 2009 at 1:48am

  • [Link was removed]
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    m9bnat m9bnat m9bnat m9bnat
    Jan. 7, 2010 at 4:53am
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Citations & References:
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  • Moore, B. Dark matter: recent results and constraints from simulations and observations. Presented at Windows on the Universe. 23 June 2009.
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