News Release

A dusty haze around blue compact dwarf galaxies

Max-Planck scientists discover large amounts of ultra-cold cosmic dust in the Virgo Cluster; Up to 50 percent of stellar light in galaxies is transformed into infrared light

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Max-Planck-Gesellschaft



Figure: The Virgo cluster spiral galaxy NGC4178. The colors show the brightness of the optical light from stars in this galaxy, ranging from blue (faint) through green and yellow and red to white (bright). The contours are lines of equal infrared brightness from dust, as observed using ISO within the rectangular box. (Photo: Max-Planck-Institute for Nuclear Physics)

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The possible effects of dust on the optical appearance of galaxies have preoccupied astronomers ever since Edwin Hubble realised 70 years ago that our Milky Way is just one galaxy amongst many in the universe. Direct observations of dust are needed to understand how much starlight is being released into the universe, what its colour is, and, therefore, what sort of stars were being formed through history in galaxies like our own Milky Way.

The team of Max-Planck scientists tackled this issue by measuring the brightness of galaxies in the invisible infrared spectrum of light expected from the dust particles blocking the visible starlight. They pointed ESA's Infrared Space Observatory (ISO) at 63 spiral and dwarf galaxies in the nearby Virgo cluster, carefully chosen to be representative of the overall population of galaxies in the local universe. Making use of ISO's unprecedented sensitivity at very long infrared wavelengths, this work represents the first statistical "census" of the total infrared energy output from "normal" galaxies.

Unexpectedly large amounts of infrared emission were discovered from very cold dust particles in almost all the galaxies measured. An example is shown in the picture, where the infrared emission from the spiral galaxy NGC4178 is depicted as contours overlaid on an image of the optical light. Remarkably, the temperature of the cold dust measured in the Virgo galaxies was found to range down to just ten degrees above absolute zero (-263 degrees Centigrade). As a consequence, astronomers are having to revise upwards by a factor of typically 10 the weight of dust in these galaxies compared to previous measurements. The data also show that up to half the total energy output of stars in normal galaxies has been converted from visible optical into infrared photons, much more than previously suspected, necessitating an upwards revision in the total amount of emitted starlight.

But the biggest surprise was found by the so-called Blue Compact Dwarf galaxies in the Virgo cluster. These are so called because when viewed with an optical telescope they are smaller than a tenth of the size of our own galaxy, and dominated by newly born massive blue stars, each shining up to 10,000 times more brightly that the sun. It had previously been supposed that dust exposed to this intense light should be very warm. The ISO observations, however, revealed huge amounts of very cold dust, in fact the coldest found from all the observed galaxies in the Virgo cluster. The scientists propose that this dust is so cold because it surrounds the galaxy, far away from the stars. They believe that "the infrared eyes of ISO may be tracing a dusty mixture of intergalactic gas, which the galaxies are still accumulating, leading to their further evolution."

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Original publications:

Tuffs, R.J., Popescu, C.C., Pierini, D., Völk, H.J., Hippelein, H., Leech, K., Metcalfe, L, Heinrichsen, I. & Xu, C.: "Far-Infrared Photometry of a Statistical Sample of Late-Type Virgo Cluster Galaxies" The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series, vol. 139, p37-79, March 15th 2002.

Popescu, C.C., Tuffs, R.J., Völk, H.J., Pierini, D. & Madore, B.F.: "Cold Dust in Late-Type Virgo Cluster Galaxies" The Astrophysical Journal, vol 567, p221-236, March 1st 2002

Contact:

Dr. Richard Tuffs
Max-Planck-Institute for Nuclear Physics
Saupfercheckweg 1, D-69117 Heidelberg, Germany.
Phone: +49-6221-516344
Fax: +49-6221-516324
Email: Richard.Tuffs@mpi-hd.mpg.de

Prof. H.J. Völk
Max-Planck- Institute for Nuclear Physics
Saupfercheckweg 1, D-69117 Heidelberg, Germany.
Phone: +49-6221-516295
Fax: +49-6221-516549
Email: Heinrich.Voelk@mpi-hd.mpg.de


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