Stream of gas stretches for 2.6 million light-years

Stream of gas stretches for 2.6 million light-years

The longest stream of hydrogen gas ever seen has been discovered acting as a bridge between galaxies 500 light years away. 

Gas stream
A stream of hydrogen gas produced by astronomers in a computer simulation. Credit: MPIA (G. Stinson / AV Maccio)

The stream of atomic hydrogen measures in at 2.6 million light years long, beating the previous record holder in the Virgo cluster by almost a million light years. Despite spanning such a huge distance, the bridge actually utilised its immense size to evade detection until now.

“Its length actually makes it harder to detect – it has the same amount of gas as a massive galaxy, but spread over a much larger area,” explained Rhys Taylor, lead author of the study in the journal MNRAS.

“It’s a bit like moving a projector further away from a screen – the image gets bigger, but the ‘surface brightness’ (the emission per unit area) goes down, so it appears dimmer.”

The record-breaking hydrogen stream
The hydrogen stream, seen as a fuzzy green colour, stretches between galaxies. The three inset images are close ups of some of the galaxies. Credit: Rhys Taylor/Arecibo Galaxy Environment Survey/The Sloan Digital Sky Survey Collaboration



The astronomers used the Arecibo radio telescope to survey the sky in search of hydrogen gas. “Hydrogen is thought to be the reservoir of fuel for star formation in galaxies, and we’re trying to understand the process which lead to star formation,” Taylor told the writer.

Streams of hydrogen are normally found engulfing galaxy clusters, but this newly discovered stream has only a few galactic neighbours. Its origin is still a puzzle, but the scientists have a number of theories to explain the unusual bridge.

One theory is that the large galaxy at one end of the bridge encountered the group of smaller galaxies in the past, dragging out the bridge as it moved away. Another idea is that the large galaxy smashed right through the smaller group, evicting the gas in the process.

Scientists are currently testing these theories using computer simulations which will eventually reveal the most likely scenario.

Get free Skymania news updates by email

Sign up for alerts to our latest reports. No spam ever – we promise!



You might also enjoy these posts


Amazing Hubble photo shows countless galaxies, each containing billions of stars
NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope has looked nearly halfway back to the beginning of the Universe to capture a cluster of galaxies, made up of billions of stars, acting as a natural te…


Super-bright galaxies shed light on early Universe
Some newly discovered, distant, super-bright galaxies are helping astronomers shine a light on the time when the early Universe moved out of the cosmic dark ages and began to glow.


Trio of giant black holes at centre of distant galaxy
Astronomers have discovered a galaxy with three giant black holes close together.


Galactic roles, a cosmic puzzle and a dusty answer
Dwarf galaxies played a major role in switching on the Universe after a long period of darkness, new research reveals.


Bright supernova explodes in nearby galaxy M82
One of the closest stellar explosions for years has been spotted in a relatively nearby galaxy, M82, that is a favourite target for amateur astronomers. It lies about 11.4 million …


Galaxies help zoom in on remote quasars
Astronomers believe they have found a new way to map quasars, the brilliant turbulent zones surrounding supermassive black holes in extremely distant galaxies.

By Paul Sutherland

Paul Sutherland has been a professional journalist for nearly 40 years. He writes regularly for science magazines including BBC Sky at Night magazine, BBC Focus, Astronomy Now and Popular Astronomy, plus he has authored three books on astronomy and contributed to others.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


Comment moderation is enabled. Your comment may take some time to appear.

Total
0
Shares
Related Posts