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Red-burning galaxies hold the key to galaxy evolution

These transitional galaxies — from a younger to an older generation — are most frequently located within group environments.
By Subaru Telescope Facility, Hilo, Hawaii Published: August 8, 2011
Cluster CL09394713
A panoramic view of the CL0939+4713 cluster located 4 billion light-years from Earth. Images were captured with the Subaru Prime Focus Camera (Suprime-Cam), all of which are a composite of a B-band image (blue), a R-band image (green), and a z’-band image (red). Left 27 arcmin x 27 arcmin field of view. Top-right: Close-up view of the central cluster region, 2.5 arcmin x 2.5 arcmin field of view. Bottom-right: Example of the concentration of red-burning galaxies, which are marked with red squares. Subaru Telescope, National Astronomical Observatory of Japan (NAOJ)
A research team of astronomers from the University of Tokyo and the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan (NAOJ) has identified the location of red star-forming galaxies around a galaxy cluster situated 4 billion light-years distant from Earth. A panoramic observation with the Subaru Telescope yielded the result. Scientists surmise that such “red-burning galaxies” are in a transitional phase from a young generation of galaxies to an older one; they may demonstrate the dramatic evolution of galaxies in the environment surrounding the cluster. The key areas for understanding how environment shaped galaxy evolution in the past universe may be where red-burning galaxies are most numerous in small groups on the outskirts of the rich cluster rather than within it.

The birth of galaxies occurred more than 10 billion years ago in the ancient universe. Assembled under their own gravity, early galaxies formed into big clusters or small groups. During the process of assemblage, their properties changed in relation to their surrounding environments, just as human traits change in the contexts of their lives. For example, galaxies grouped in high-density environments such as clusters tend to be elliptical or lenticular while solitary ones tend to be spiral galaxies. How galaxies form and evolve is one of the biggest mysteries in recent extragalactic astronomy.

When and how did patterns of galactic formation become established and evolve? To address this question, many astronomers are investigating distant clusters of galaxies where assemblage of galaxies occurred in the early universe. A research team led by Yusei Koyama from the University of Tokyo/National Astronomical Observatory of Japan used the Subaru Prime Focus Camera (Suprime-Cam) to carry out a panoramic observation targeting a relatively well-known rich cluster,CL0939+4713, located 4 billion light-years from Earth. The team used a special filter that can detect the Hydrogen-alpha (H-alpha) line emitted by ionized hydrogen 4 billion years ago. Koyama’s team members carefully compared the images taken with and without the special filter and then identified more than 400 galaxies showing an excess of helium (He) in the special filter images. Such narrow-band “excess” galaxies are likely to be star-forming galaxies. Surprisingly, Koyama’s team found that an unexpectedly large number of star-forming galaxies had red colors. Even more interesting was the location of these red-burning galaxies — they reside primarily in the group-scale environments located far away from the main body of the cluster.

These findings raise some intriguing questions. What is the physical origin of these red-burning galaxies? Why are they concentrated in groups and not in clusters? No one, including the research team members, knows the answer yet. At a minimum, the strong H-alpha emissions clearly show that the red-burning galaxies are actively forming new stars. Therefore, their red colors are likely to be produced by dust rather than by old stellar populations. The researchers expect that the strong gravity of the main cluster will cause the groups where the red-burning galaxies are most numerous to merge with it. The most significant result of this research is that the properties of galaxies are indeed changing in relatively sparse environments before they are finally absorbed into a rich cluster.

The research team noticed that the number of old galaxies, without active star-formation, appeared to be increasing in the group environments, exactly where the red-burning galaxies are most numerous. This suggests that the red-burning galaxies are related to the increase in old galaxies, and that they are likely to be in a transitional phase from a younger to an older generation. The finding that such transitional galaxies are located most frequently within group environments shows that galaxy groups are the key environments for understanding how environment shapes the evolution of galaxies.

The research team emphasized the important contribution of the unique wide-field capability of the Subaru Telescope for accomplishing this research because its panoramic imaging revealed the location of the transitional galaxies. The same research team now plans to conduct a new observation to identify the physical origin of the red-burning galaxies discovered in this study. This should be an important and exciting step toward a more complete understanding of the environments shaping the galaxies in the present-day universe.

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3 stars
RICHARD MCCONNELL said:
I would like to know how they define the difference between a 'group' and a 'cluster'? Clearly a problem in semantics.
It isn't clear from this article.
3 stars
DANA WILSON from UTAH said:
Bill ...

You wrote "I need at least a 10 point IQ boost to understand this one." I had exactly the same reaction to the article. I'd hazard that the problem isn't our stupidity, but our unfamiliarity with some of the terms; terms that should have been defined by the article's author. That's my position and I'm sticking to it. ;-)
4 stars
BILL SIMPSON from LOUISIANA said:
I need at least a 10 point IQ boost to understand this one. The only thing I can say is that the uneven density of material in the early universe may account for the difference in evolution of galaxies in the groups, versus the clusters. If the stars formed at different times, or had some kind of size bias, causing then to evolved at different rates, due to variations in the density of gas at random spots in the early universe, then one might expect the galaxies made from these stars to be different from each other. So galaxies in the groups are composed of different populations of star types, than galaxies in the clusters, because they had different nursery areas. I can speculate that dark matter density and electromagnetism (doubtful, but you never know) could influence galaxy evolution.
I give myself a C+. But hey, they didn't have food stamps when I was a kid. I want neurological development deprivation reparations from Washington, but will settle for a nice, lightweight Meade LS-8 ACF. ( I had to turn down the sound on the flat screen and Internet radio for this article, but I won't charge you guys for entertainment damages. Don't laugh, some lawyer is probably working on it.) I almost made little written notes, after getting mentally lost in all those galaxy descriptions up there, but then realized that if the scientists that discovered it all couldn't explain it, why should I. That second-to-last paragraph is tough. I'll have to take their word for it. Summary Guess : The abundance of dust in the red-burning galaxies means that they are (were) still coming together forming stars from interstellar dust that was less concentrated in the groups, than it was in the clusters. (I guess.) So it is better to look at the groups than the clusters, if you want to study the evolution of galaxies. Pressure waves could have some influence in the rate of star formation from all the unused dust in the younger, red-burners too. I give up.
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