Space
Cloud to Collide With Our Galaxy
By
Jeanna Bryner
Staff Writer
posted: 11 January 2008
11:00 am ET
AUSTIN,
Texas A colossal cloud of gas is racing toward a collision with our galaxy,
and when it hits, the crash could trigger an intense burst of star formation.
The
collision and stellar light show will occur in 20 million to 40 million years,
an astronomer announced here today at a meeting of the American Astronomical Society.
The
cloud, dubbed Smith's Cloud after the astronomer who discovered it in 1963, is
just 8,000 light-years from our galaxy's disk. Jam-packed with enough hydrogen
to make a million stars like the sun, it is 11,000 light-years long and 2,500
light-years wide.
"My
guess is that this [gas cloud] is a remnant of the original formation of the Milky
Way in the way that comets and meteors are remnants of the formation of the solar
system," said Jay Lockman, of the National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO)
in Green Bank, West Virginia.
If
you could see the cloud, it would span 30 times the width of the moon.
"From
tip to tail it would cover almost as much sky as the Orion constellation,"
Lockman said. "But as far as we know it is made entirely of gas no
one has found a single star in it."
For
decades after the cloud's discovery, scientists were puzzled over its allegiance
because the available images lacked any detail. They didn't know whether it belonged
to the Milky Way, or if the cloud was moving either getting blown out or
falling into our galaxy.
Lockman
and his colleagues made their recent observations of the cloud with the National
Science Foundation's Robert C. Byrd Green Bank Telescope, the largest steerable
radio telescope. Since the cloud is made of cold gas, it emits only in the radio
wavelengths, Lockman said. It does not generate any visible light.
Results
showed Smith's Cloud is plunging into the Milky Way, not heading out. And it's
falling in at more than 540,000 mph (869,000 kilometers per hour).
"We
are able to see it rubbing up against the outer atmosphere of the Milky Way,"
Lockman told SPACE.com. "It's not only coming in, it's starting to push up
gas in front of it."
He
added, "It is also feeling a tidal force from the gravity of the Milky Way
and may be in the process of being torn apart."
Tidal
forces of gravity, like the moon tugging on Earth, pull the front parts of an
object greater than the regions on the far side.
He
said the cloud would likely strike a region somewhat farther from the galactic
center than our solar system. The addition of new gas into our galaxy along with
the shock of the collision may trigger a burst of rapid star formation.
"When
it hits, it could set off a tremendous burst of star formation," Lockman
said. "Many of those stars will be very massive, rushing through their lives
quickly and exploding as supernovae."