Astronomers988 Archivesspotted a pair of exotic features believed to be the aftermath of a colossal cosmic smackdown — not between two galaxies, but two groupsof galaxies.
These glowing arcs of radio energy are known as "radio relics," faint clouds resulting from powerful shockwaves surging through hot gas that fills the spaceamid a galaxy cluster.
The cluster, PSZ2 G181.06+48.47, is some 963 million light-yearsfrom Earth, but its image is less forgettable than its name. Using the Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope in India and the Very Large Array in New Mexico, a team of researchers spotted the arcs flanking the cluster like giant parentheses. The distance between the punctuation is an estimated 11 million light-years — about 100 times the span of the Milky Way.
That makes their separation a record holder — "the largest known to date," according to a paperpublished on the discovery in The Astrophysical Journal.
SEE ALSO: What cracked the Milky Way's giant cosmic bone? Scientists think they know.Galaxies are often part of larger collections of galaxies, held together by gravity, according to NASA. These groups and clusters, containing hundreds to thousands of galactic neighborhoods, serve as building blocks for the larger structures of the universe. Clusters are also composed of scorching gas that reaches millions of degrees as well as dark matter, an invisible material that scientists don't yet fully understand.
The team, led by Kamlesh Rajpurohit, an astronomer at the Harvard & Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, thinks the newfound radio relics formed when shock fronts sped through space following two clusters wrecking. These waves can force particles to shine in radio light.
Though these two come as a pair, they're not identical twins. The researchers describe the northernmost glow as brighter and polarized, meaning its light is moving in the same direction. Its companion to the south has a stranger ghostly shape and an energy pattern that may mean it was caused by a more powerful shockwave.
The relics suggest the entire cluster is in the final throes of a merger set in motion a billion years before.
In the past, astronomers have dubbed clusters fun nicknames based on the shapes of their relics, such as the Toothbrush Cluster. Perhaps in the future this one will leave behind its numerical moniker for something a bit snazzier, like the Eyebrows Cluster or the Air Quotes Cluster. Until that time, you can call it Planck cluster G181+48 for short, Rajpurohit said.
Scientists discovered one other curiosity between the relics: a faint glow at the center of the cluster. This could be a so-called "radio halo," another kind of radio source that emerges when churning gas and particles create turbulence after a violent cosmic crash.
Astronomers have previously detected less than 30 such clusters with relic pairs. But the upcoming Square Kilometre Array being built in South Africa and Australia could be a "game changer," according to the paper's authors.
"There could potentially be many more awaiting discovery in the era of large radio surveys," they said.
UPDATE: May. 7, 2025, 10:55 a.m. EDT This story has been updated to include additional data from the paper's author on the estimated distance of the galaxy cluster from Earth.
24 super honest Father's Day cards for every type of dadReese Witherspoon had a glorious response to these new 'Big Little Lies' photosCelebrate Father's Day with these perfect parenting 'tips' from Donald TrumpThe 'Dietland' finale doesn't say exactly what it (probably) meansGoogle Glass paired with the right software could make a big difference for kids with autismVladimir Putin is totally down with a Donald Trump presidencySenator ends gun control filibuster with heartTrump tweets about 'Alfonse' Capone and truly what is happening?London's traffic lights get LGBT makeover for PrideSamsung confirms slow Galaxy S9 sales in quarterly reportOur first look at the DJI Mavic 2 is hereThere may be a better way to find wouldAirbnb offers to renovate a room in Castle from 'Game of Thrones'New iPhone dummy models fondled on videoNaming planets in 'No Man's Sky' will probably be like this comicChilling Facebook Live video captures shooting death in ChicagoMoviePass' rescue plan might do more harm than goodCatch up on Twitter's top tweets from the past weekThe Academy challenged Twitter users to summarize movies in five wordsWe desperately wish this Olive Garden makeup palette was real Surreal memes deserve their own internet dimension Someone is trolling a senator with mean fortune cookies Vets thawed a cat that nearly froze to death and saved its life Governor Northam digs himself further into hole in new interview US Customs agents have been seizing Americans' phone data unchecked for 15 years Richard E. Grant's star Woman finally gets 'the smoking hot body' she's always wanted, in her obituary Pete Davidson covers up Ariana Grande tattoo with the word 'cursed' HelloFresh In Australia: Everything you need to know TikTok's search suggests misinformation almost 20 percent of the time, says report The women of Congress stole the show during Trump's State of the Union address Amazon's first real NFL game was a major win for Prime subscriptions What a passwordless future could look like 'Goodnight Mommy': What's the difference between remake and original? Amazon's 'Customers ask Alexa' feature is now live: Here's how it works Corn Twitter comes for Bud Light after their anti New Mexico's governor literally runs through walls in response to Trump's border wall Fiji Water is now countersuing the Fiji Water woman Anthony Hopkins, cannibalism icon, is the happiest man on Twitter Why 'King Charles III' isn't a guide for Charles III
2.8211s , 10132.0859375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【1988 Archives】,Inspiration Information Network