Nasa scientists discover cosmic tsunami of hot gas twice the size of the Milky Way

Nasa scientists discover cosmic tsunami of hot gas twice the size of the Milky Way



An international team of scientists has discovered a vast wave of hot gas in the nearby Perseus galaxy cluster. Spanning some 200,000 light-years, the wave is about twice the size of our own Milky Way galaxy, according to a study published online in the journal Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. For the study, the researchers combined data from Nasa’s Chandra X-ray Observatory with radio observations and computer simulations.
PerseusSimMed_FR
The wave formed billions of years ago, after a small galaxy cluster grazed Perseus and caused its vast supply of gas to slosh around an enormous volume of space, the researchers said. “Perseus is one of the most massive nearby clusters and the brightest one in X-rays, so Chandra data provide us with unparalleled detail,” said lead scientist Stephen Walker at Nasa’s Goddard Space Flight Centre in Greenbelt, Maryland.
Image: Nasa
Image: Nasa
“The wave we’ve identified is associated with the flyby of a smaller cluster, which shows that the merger activity that produced these giant structures is still ongoing,” Walker said. Galaxy clusters are the largest structures bound by gravity in the universe today. Some 11 million light-years across and located about 240 million light-years away, the Perseus galaxy cluster is named for its host constellation. Like all galaxy clusters, most of its observable matter takes the form of a pervasive gas averaging tens of millions of degrees, so hot it only glows in X-rays.

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