New images may give clues about the universe’s origins

New images may give clues about the universe’s origins

JOHANNESBURG – The newly discovered collision of two galaxies millions of years ago, which sparked rings of fire that are still expanding, may offer new clues on the origins of the universe, astronomers said yesterday.

New images of the Andromeda Galaxy were captured by an infrared camera aboard the Spitzer Space Telescope and are described in the science journal Nature. The pictures offer fresh insight into the ever-changing nature of galaxies, said Harvard University astrophysicist Giovanni Fazio.Fazio, the mastermind behind the Spitzer, is considered one of the world’s top space pioneers.”We though, ordinaranions around it.But now we understand its structure.It will be used as a computer model to understand and study the early universe,” Fazio said.The cosmic crash is believed to have happened 210 million years ago when dinosaurs roamed the earth, but is a relatively recent occurrence in the grander scheme of time, scientists said.”That is like this morning in cosmology terms,” David Block, a professor at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg who led the research project, told reporters at the release of the findings.After the images from the telescope were entered into a computer model, it revealed how a small galaxy hit the centre, or “sweet spot”, of its larger neighbour with such force it fired off new stars, space dust and two rings of fire.Roughly comparable to a ripple effect from a stone dropped in water, the rings continue to spread at a rate of 50 km a second.On a clear night, the Andromeda Galaxy is visible to the naked eye as it is the closest spiral galaxy to Earth – separated by a distance of about 2,5 million light years – and to our own Milky Way Galaxy.Infrared images can look much deeper into the universe to show how galaxies, stars and planets were first formed and their current make-up.Nampa-ReutersThe pictures offer fresh insight into the ever-changing nature of galaxies, said Harvard University astrophysicist Giovanni Fazio.Fazio, the mastermind behind the Spitzer, is considered one of the world’s top space pioneers.”We though, ordinaranions around it.But now we understand its structure.It will be used as a computer model to understand and study the early universe,” Fazio said.The cosmic crash is believed to have happened 210 million years ago when dinosaurs roamed the earth, but is a relatively recent occurrence in the grander scheme of time, scientists said.”That is like this morning in cosmology terms,” David Block, a professor at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg who led the research project, told reporters at the release of the findings.After the images from the telescope were entered into a computer model, it revealed how a small galaxy hit the centre, or “sweet spot”, of its larger neighbour with such force it fired off new stars, space dust and two rings of fire.Roughly comparable to a ripple effect from a stone dropped in water, the rings continue to spread at a rate of 50 km a second.On a clear night, the Andromeda Galaxy is visible to the naked eye as it is the closest spiral galaxy to Earth – separated by a distance of about 2,5 million light years – and to our own Milky Way Galaxy.Infrared images can look much deeper into the universe to show how galaxies, stars and planets were first formed and their current make-up.Nampa-Reuters

Stay informed with The Namibian – your source for credible journalism. Get in-depth reporting and opinions for only N$85 a month. Invest in journalism, invest in democracy –
Subscribe Now!

Latest News