Scientists find an unexpectedly calm galaxy cluster 8.4 billion light-years away
Astronomers have discovered the most distant galaxy cluster and it’s the most ‘relaxed‘ one they’ve seen to date.
This galaxy cluster, called SPT-CL J2215-3537 (SPT2215 for short), is the farthest one ever spotted that is not being disrupted by violent collisions with other clusters of galaxies.
SPT2215 is about 8.4 billion light-years from Earth, and is seen when the universe is only 5.3 billion years old, compared to its current age of 13.8 billion years.
This implies that SPT2215 got a head start in its formation compared to other clusters of similar size and that it has been ‘coasting’ for the last billion years, allowing it to relax.
Astronomers estimate the cluster has a mass some 700 trillion times that of the Sun.
Galaxy clusters are collections of dozens to hundreds of galaxies, along with vast amounts of hot gas and dark matter filling the space between galaxies, all held together by gravity.
They grow over time by merging with other galaxy clusters, causing disturbances in the cluster’s gas. Given enough time to ‘relax’ without a merger, however, the gas can take on a smooth, calm appearance.
Teams of scientists used data from Nasa’s Chandra X-ray Observatory, their retired Spitzer Space Telescope, the National Science Foundation/Department of Energy’s South Pole Telescope, and the Dark Energy Survey project in Chile.
‘Up until now, we have not seen a relaxed galaxy cluster as distant as SPT2215,’ said Michael Calzadilla of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), lead author of the most recent of the three papers, which confirmed the cluster to be relaxed.
In the middle of SPT2215 is a large galaxy containing a giant black hole in its centre. The paper by Calzadilla discovered tremendous amounts of new stars forming in this large galaxy. The formation of stars in a cluster’s central galaxy is fuelled by cooling the hot gas when a cluster becomes relaxed.
The behaviour of the giant black hole in the cluster’s centre influences how quickly the gas cools to form stars.
If the black hole drives too many powerful outbursts, then most of the gas in the cluster is prevented from cooling enough to form a flood of new stars. Unlike most relaxed clusters observed with Chandra, the giant black hole in SPT2215 does not appear to be preventing such cooling.
‘It seems like the black hole in SPT2215 is quiet enough to let star formation flourish,’ said Michael McDonald, a co-author on all three studies.
Another key feature of SPT2215 is the isolation of its central galaxy. There are no other galaxies within about 600,000 light-years that are anywhere near as bright or extended.
So, the cluster has not experienced a merger with another cluster in about the last billion years, giving another piece of evidence that SPT2215 is relaxed.
Scientists were not sure they would find a galaxy cluster that was relaxed at this epoch of the universe, because they are usually still undergoing the turmoil of mergers with other clusters or groups of galaxies as they increase in size.
‘The fact that this cluster is so massive, so early in the universe suggests a really exciting, fast formation history,’ said Lindsey Bleem of the US Department of Energy’s Argonne National Laboratory in Lemont, Illinois, whose team first reported spotting the cluster in 2020.
‘Yet the fact that it is relaxed suggests the opposite. It would be like finding a tidy kitchen right after the dinner rush.’
These results on SPT2215 fit well with those of Nasa’s James Webb Space Telescope, which has shown galaxies forming at a very young age.
‘Relaxed clusters like SPT2215 are one of the signposts that have been used to measure the expansion of the universe,’ said Adam Mantz of Stanford University, who first reported SPT2215’s relaxed status using Chandra data in 2022.
‘Adding distant objects like this to our sample of relaxed clusters allows us to better constrain the acceleration of the cosmic expansion, and the properties of the dark energy that drives it.’
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