/Bizarre spiral object found swirling around Milky Way’s center

Bizarre spiral object found swirling around Milky Way’s center

Key idea: Astronomers have peered into the center of the Milky Way and discovered what appears to be a miniature spiral galaxy, swirling daintily around a single large star.

Original author and publication date: Brandon Specktor – June 20, 2022

Futurizonte Editor’s Note: Every single time we look into space we discover something new, often unexpected.

From the article:

The star — located about 26,000 light-years from Earth near the dense and dusty galactic center — is about 32 times as massive as the sun and sits within an enormous disk of swirling gas, known as a “protostellar disk.” (The disk itself measures about 4,000 astronomical units wide — or 4,000 times the distance between Earth and the sun).

Such disks are widespread in the universe, serving as stellar fuel that help young stars grow into big, bright suns over millions of years. But astronomers have never seen one like this before: a galaxy in miniature, orbiting perilously close to the center of our own galaxy.

How did this mini-spiral come to be, and are there more like it out there? The answers may lie in a mysterious object, about three times as massive as Earth’s sun, lurking just outside the spiral disk’s orbit, according to a new study published May 30 in the journal Nature Astronomy(opens in new tab).

Using high-definition observations taken with the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) telescope in Chile, the researchers found that the disk doesn’t appear to be moving in a way that would give it a natural spiral shape. Rather, they wrote, the disk seems to have been literally stirred up by a near-collision with another body — possibly the mysterious triple-sun-sized object that’s still visible nearby it.

To check this hypothesis, the team calculated a dozen potential orbits for the mysterious object, then ran a simulation to see if any of those orbits could have brought the object close enough to the protostellar disk to whip it into a spiral. They found that, if the object followed one specific path, it could have skimmed past the disk about 12,000 years ago, perturbing the dust just enough to result in the vivid spiral shape seen today.

“The nice match among analytical calculations, the numerical simulation and the ALMA observations provides robust evidence that the spiral arms in the disk are relics of the flyby of the intruding object,” study co-author Lu Xing, an associate researcher from the Shanghai Astronomical Observatory of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, said in a statement.

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