Sunday, March 09, 2025

 SPACE/COSMOS

“Sloshing” from celestial collisions solves mystery of how galactic clusters stay hot



Cutting-edge observations of Centaurus Cluster shine new light on evolving universe



Tokyo Metropolitan University

Artist’s impression of the center of the Centaurus Cluster. 

image: 

Artist’s impression of the center of the Centaurus Cluster. Blue shows a vast flow of hot gas, white shows galaxies, and reddish brown shows cool gas.

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Credit: JAXA




Tokyo, Japan – The XRISM collaboration have discovered flows of hot gas in the core of the Centaurus Cluster. By comparing state-of-the-art X-ray measurements from the XRISM satellite with numerical simulations, they showed this is evidence for collisions between galaxy clusters, causing gas inside to “slosh”. This solves the longstanding mystery of how cluster cores stay hot, and sheds light on how our universe continues to evolve.

 

Astronomers have long envisioned how vast gravitational forces between galaxies and galactic clusters, colossal cosmic assemblies bound by dark matter, drive their growth through mergers and collisions. However, direct evidence for this has been lacking.

The international XRISM (X-ray Imaging and Spectroscopy Mission) collaboration has observed the Centaurus galaxy cluster with the XRISM satellite, launched in 2023 by the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA); the on-board spectrometer, called Resolve, features groundbreaking precision spectroscopy, allowing accurate identification of gas velocities.

Looking at the core of the Centaurus Cluster, including the central galaxy NGC 4696, they discovered for the first time a bulk flow of hot gas traveling around 130 to 310 kilometers per second in the line-of-sight from Earth. They were also able to create a map of how the velocity varies at locations away from the center. Making comparisons with simulations, a task team led by Professor Yutaka Fujita from Tokyo Metropolitan University and Associate Professor Kosuke Sato from the High Energy Accelerator Research Organization found that this is consistent with the “sloshing” of the hot gas, also known as the intracluster medium (ICM), caused by collisions with other galactic clusters. This is the first direct evidence for this kind of “sloshing”, validating a long-hypothesized picture of the evolution of the universe.

It also solves a long-standing unsolved mystery for astronomers of how such bright X-ray emitting gas stays hot. Theoretically, such intense radiation should entail a loss of energy, leading to cooling of the gas; this is known as radiative cooling. The time scale over which this cooling should occur is shorter than the age of the cluster, but observations so far suggest that, somehow, the gas manages to stay hot. These new findings present an elegant solution to this problem. If the gas in the cluster core can “slosh,” involving vast bulk flows of gas to-and-fro around the center, energy can be transported to the core through a mixing process, keeping the gas hot and the emissions bright. The team’s breakthroughs have now been published in the scientific journal Nature.

These unprecedentedly precise measurements are a significant leap forward in our understanding of the formation and evolution of galactic clusters. With years still left in the XRISM mission, the world of astrophysics eagerly awaits more insights into the changing nature of the universe.

This work was supported by JSPS KAKENHI Grant Numbers JP22H00158, JP22H01268, JP22K03624, JP23H04899, JP21K13963, JP24K00638, JP24K17105, JP21K13958, JP21H01095, JP23K20850, JP24H00253, JP21K03615, JP24K00677, JP20K14491, JP23H00151, JP19K21884, JP20H01947, JP20KK0071, JP23K20239, JP24K00672, JP24K17104, JP24K17093, JP20K04009, JP21H04493, JP20H01946, JP23K13154, JP19K14762, JP20H05857 and JP23K03459, NASA (Grant Numbers  80NSSC23K0650, 80NSSC20K0733, 80NSSC18K0978, 80NSSC20K0883, 80NSSC20K0737, 80NSSC24K0678, 80NSSC18K1684 and 80NNSC22K1922), the National Science Foundation Award 2205918, the Science and Technology Facilities Council Grant ST/T000244/1, the Canadian Space Agency Grant 18XARMSTMA, the Kagoshima University Postdoctoral Research Program (KU-DREAM), the RIKEN SPDR Program, the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation through the Sloan Research Fellowship, the RIKEN Pioneering Project Evolution of Matter in the Universe (r-EMU), the Rikkyo University Special Fund for Research (Rikkyo SFR), and the GAČR EXPRO (Grant Number 21-13491X). Part of this work was performed under the auspices of the US Department of Energy by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory under contract DE-AC52-07NA27344. The material is based on work supported by NASA under award number 80GSFC21M0002. This work was also supported by the JSPS Core-to-Core Program (JPJSCCA20220002). The material is also based on work supported by the Strategic Research Center of Saitama University.


X-ray spectrum of the Centaurus Galaxy Cluster measured with the XRISM Resolve spectrometer. The spectrometer on the XRISM satellite can tell peaks apart with unparalleled resolution.


 

Schematic of measurement by XRISM. Galaxy NGC 4696 at the center of the cluster is surrounded by different gas flows on either side with respect to our line of sight.


Intergalactic “sloshing” of hot gas. Collisions between clusters generate a “sloshing” effect for the intracluster medium, causing vast flows of gas that cause the content of the clusters to oscillate.

Credit

JAXA

Ariane 6 successfully completes first commercial mission

The historic Ariane 6 liftoff occurred on Tuesday, July 9 at 1600 GFT from the Guiana Space Centre, also known as Europe's Spaceport, in Kourou, French Guiana.
Copyright ESA, Arianespace, CNES
By Euronews with AP
Published on 

The European Space Agency's Ariane 6 rocket successfully launched a French military satellite into space this week on its first commercial mission.

Europe's Ariane 6 rocket roared skyward in its first commercial flight this week.

It successfully launched a CSO-3 French military observation satellite into orbit at an altitude of around 800 kilometres.

The rocket took off smoothly from the European spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana, quickly disappearing into thick clouds.

The ArianeGroup says the launch is significant because it "guarantees independent access to space for France and Europe," according to a statement.

"Ariane confirms the return of autonomous access to space for Europe," Martin Sion, the CEO of ArianeGroup, said in a statement.

"It demonstrates the quality of the industrial development of Europe's new heavy-lift launcher".

This third CSO satellite also completes an Earth observation system that will transmit high resolution images to France's military and its European partners.

Ariane 6 had its first flight in July 2024 after repeated delays.

This first commercial launch was delayed, too, due to an "anomaly" on the ground.

Guy Pilchen, ESA project manager for the Ariane 6, told Euronews Nextthat 2025 will be the year that Ariane 6 "ramps up" its flight schedule, with nine launches this year and up to 12 in future years.

Until Ariane 6's inaugural flight, the European Space Agency temporarily employed Elon Musk's SpaceX to fulfill some of its contracts, which Pilchen said will no longer be the case.

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