Sky survey provides clues to how they change over time.
The
direction in which a galaxy spins depends on its mass,
researchers have found. A team of astrophysicists analysed
1418 galaxies and found that small ones are likely to spin
on a different axis to large ones. The rotation was measured
in relation to each galaxy’s closest “cosmic filament” – the
largest structures in the universe.
Filaments
are massive thread-like formations, comprising huge amounts
of matter – including galaxies, gas and, modelling implies,
dark matter. They can be 500 million light years long but
just 20 million light years wide. At their largest scale,
the filaments divide the universe into a vast
gravitationally linked lattice interspersed with enormous
dark matter voids.
A simulation showing a
section of the Universe at its broadest scale. A web of
cosmic filaments forms a lattice of matter, enclosing
vast voids. Credit: Tiamat simulation, Greg
Poole
“It’s worth noticing that
the spine of cosmic filaments is pretty much the highway of
galactic migration, with many galaxies encountering and
merging along the way,” says lead researcher Charlotte
Welker, an ASTRO 3D researcher working initially at the
International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR)
and now at McMaster University in Canada.
The
filaments are why the universe looks a little like a
honeycomb, or a cosmic Aero chocolate bar.
Using data
gathered by an instrument called the Sydney-AAO Multi-object
Integral-field spectrograph (SAMI) at Australia’s
Anglo-Australian Telescope (AAT), Dr Welker, second author
and ASTRO 3D principal investigator Professor Joss
Bland-Hawthorn from the University of Sydney, and colleagues
from Australia, the US, France and Korea studied each of the
target galaxies and measured its spin in relation to its
nearest filament.
They found
that smaller ones tended to rotate in direct alignment to
the filaments, while larger ones turned at right angles. The
alignment changes from the first to the second as galaxies,
drawn by gravity towards the spine of a filament, collide
and merge with others, thus gaining mass.
It is a
phenomenon that Dr Welker likens to roller-skating in the
company of a friend.
“The flip can be sudden,” she
says. “Merging with another galaxy can be all it
takes.
“Imagine
you are skating after a friend and catching up. If you grab
your friend’s hand while you are still moving faster, you
will both start rotating on a vertical axis – a spin
perpendicular to your horizontal path.
“However,
if a small cat – a much lighter bit of matter – runs after
your friend and jumps on her she probably won’t start
spinning. It would take a lot of cats leaping on her at once
to change her rotation.”
Co-author
Scott Croom from the University of Sydney, also an ASTRO 3D
principal investigator, says the result offers insight into
the deep structure of the Universe.
“Virtually
all galaxies rotate, and this rotation is fundamental to how
galaxies form,” he says.
“For
example, most galaxies are in flat rotating disks, like our
Milky Way. Our result is helping us to understand how that
galactic rotation builds up across cosmic
time.”
He adds
that a new instrument, called Hector, set to be installed at
the Anglo Australian Telescope next year, will enable a
significant expansion of research in the field.
“Hector
will be able to carry out surveys five times larger than
SAMI,” he says. “With this we will be able to dig into the
details of this spin alignment to better understand the
physics behind it.”
The Milky
Way, by the way, has a spin well aligned with its nearest
cosmic filament, but belongs to a class of intermediate size
galaxies that, overall, show no clear tendency towards
parallel or perpendicular spins.
“It’s like saying that there is no
preference for tea or coffee among a group of people,” says
Dr Welker. “Individuals may still prefer either tea or
coffee, but overall there is no general tendency towards
coffee in the group.”
The
research has early access availability in the journal
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (MNRS),
and is also available in full on the preprint site
arxiv.
ASTRO3D is
the ARC Centre of Excellence for Astrophysics in 3
Dimensions.
Media contacts:
Dr Charlotte Welker: 289 639 1918, time
zone is GMT-5; please ask to speak to Dr Welker
Professor Scott Croom: +61 450 103 695,
time zone is GMT+11
Professor Joss Bland-Hawthorn: +61 406
973 133, time zone is GMT+11
Professor Lisa Kewley, ASTRO 3D director:
+61451 045 968, time zone is GMT+11
Further assistance:
Andrew Masterson:
andrew@scienceinpublic.com.au; +61488 777 179, time zone is
GMT+11
Funding:
The research was funded Australian
Research Council grants FF0776384 and LE130100198, an ARC
Laureate Fellowship, and ARC Future Fellowship, the Australian
Research Council Centre of Excellence for All Sky Astrophysics
in 3 Dimensions (ASTRO 3D), the Australian Research Council
Centre of Excellence for All-sky Astrophysics (CAASTRO), the
Flagship Allocation Scheme of the NCI National Facility at the
ANU, and the National Science Foundation.
The paper:
The SAMI Galaxy Survey: First detection
of a transition in spin orientation with respect to cosmic
filaments in the stellar kinematics of galaxies.
- C. Welker 1,2,4,5;
- J. Bland-Hawthorn3,4;
- J. Van de Sande3,4;
- C. Lagos1,4;
- P. Elahi1,4;
- D. Obreschkow1,4;
- J. Bryant3,4;
- C. Pichon5,12;
- L. Cortese2,4;
- S. N. Richards6;
- S. M. Croom3,4;
- M. Goodwin7;
- J. S. Lawrence8;
- S. Sweet9,4;
- A. Lopez-Sanchez8;
- A. Medling10,11;
- M. S. Owers13;
- Y. Dubois5;
- J. Devriendt14,15
Department of Physics and Astronomy, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
- ICRAR, University of Western Australia, Crawley, Perth, 6009, Western Australia
- Sydney Institute for Astronomy, School of Physics, A28, The University of Sydney, NSW, 2006, Australia
- ARC Centre of Excellence for Astrophysics in 3 Dimensions (ASTRO 3D)
- CNRS and UPMC Univ. Paris 06, UMR 7095, Institut d’Astrophysique de Paris, 98 bis Boulevard Arago, F-75014 Paris, France
- SOFIA Science Center, USRA, NASA Ames Research Center, Building N232, MS 232-12, P.O. Box 1, Moffett Field, CA 94035-0001, USA
- Australian Astronomical Observatory, 105 Delhi Rd, North Ryde, NSW 2113, Australia
- Australian Astronomical Optics, Macquarie, Macquarie University, NSW 2109, Australia
- Centre for Astrophysics and Supercomputing, Swinburne University of Technology, PO Box 218, Hawthorn, VIC 3122
- Ritter Astrophysical Research Center University of Toledo Toledo, OH 43606, USA
- Research School for Astronomy and Astrophysics Australian National University Canberra, ACT 2611, Australia
- Korea Institute of Advanced Studies (KIAS) 85 Hoegiro, Dongdaemun-gu, Seoul, 02455, Republic of Korea
- Department of Physics and Astronomy, Macquarie University, NSW 2109, Australia
- Sub-department of Astrophysics, University of Oxford, Keble Road, Oxford, OX1 3RH, United Kingdom
- Observatoire de Lyon, UMR 5574, 9 avenue Charles Andre, Saint Genis Laval 69561, France
MNRAS version:
https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2019MNRAS.tmp.2470W/abstract
Arxiv version: https://arxiv.org/pdf/1909.12371.pdf
Additional photographs:

