Simulated map of missing satellite galaxies could answer dark matter puzzle
The Rochester Institute of Technology Press Release
This
image, captured by the Very Large Array, shows the atomic hydrogen
distribution of the Whirlpool Galaxy. The “X” marks the dwarf companion
satellite. Dynamical simulations can recover its location and mass.
Image credit: Chakrabarti et al. 2011.
Earlier this year, Chakrabarti, assistant professor of physics in RIT’s School of Physics and Astronomy, validated her prediction of a previously unseen satellite galaxy located close to the plane of the Milky Way. In her new study, Chakrabarti and Andy Lipnicky, a Ph.D. student in RIT’s astrophysical sciences and technology program, will create the first “mock” map and catalogue of satellite populations from analysing extended atomic hydrogen discs.
“We will produce models that are consistent with both the atomic hydrogen and stellar data of our galaxy, which displays large ripples in the outskirts, a prominent warp and vertical waves in the galactic disc,” Chakrabarti said.
Chakrabarti’s goal of gaining an understanding of the distribution of dark matter combines her method with gravitational lensing. She will analyse the ripples in the atomic hydrogen map and results from gravitational lensing — a technique that uses the bending of light to weigh distant galaxies and reconstruct the dark-matter background.
“Comparing and contrasting results from both methods might improve the statistics of detecting dark-matter dominated dwarf galaxies,” Chakrabarti said.
end quote from:
http://astronomynow.com/2015/07/23/simulated-map-of-missing-satellite-galaxies-could-answer-dark-matter-puzzle/
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