WASHINGTON -- The spectacular barred spiral galaxy NGC 6872 has ranked
among the biggest stellar systems for decades. Now a team of astronomers
from the United States, Chile and Brazil has crowned it the
largest-known spiral, based on archival data from NASA's Galaxy
Evolution Explorer (GALEX) mission. GALEX has since been loaned to the
California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, Calif.
Measuring tip-to-tip across its two outsized spiral arms, NGC 6872 spans
more than 522,000 light-years, making it more than five times the size
of our Milky Way galaxy.
"Without GALEX's ability to detect
the ultraviolet light of the youngest, hottest stars, we would never
have recognized the full extent of this intriguing system," said lead
scientist Rafael Eufrasio, a research assistant at NASA's Goddard Space
Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., and a doctoral student at Catholic
University of America in Washington. He presented the findings Thursday
at the American Astronomical Society meeting in Long Beach, Calif.
The galaxy's unusual size and appearance stem from its interaction
with a much smaller disk galaxy named IC 4970, which has only about
one-fifth the mass of NGC 6872. The odd couple is located 212 million
light-years from Earth in the southern constellation Pavo.
Astronomers think large galaxies, including our own, grew through
mergers and acquisitions -- assembling over billions of years by
absorbing numerous smaller systems.
Intriguingly, the
gravitational interaction of NGC 6872 and IC 4970 may have done the
opposite, spawning what may develop into a new small galaxy.
"The northeastern arm of NGC 6872 is the most disturbed and is rippling
with star formation, but at its far end, visible only in the
ultraviolet, is an object that appears to be a tidal dwarf galaxy
similar to those seen in other interacting systems," said team member
Duilia de Mello, a professor of astronomy at Catholic University.
The tidal dwarf candidate is brighter in the ultraviolet than other
regions of the galaxy, a sign it bears a rich supply of hot young stars
less than 200 million years old.
The researchers studied the
galaxy across the spectrum using archival data from the European
Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope, the Two Micron All Sky
Survey, and NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope, as well as GALEX.
By analyzing the distribution of energy by wavelength, the team
uncovered a distinct pattern of stellar age along the galaxy's two
prominent spiral arms. The youngest stars appear in the far end of the
northwestern arm, within the tidal dwarf candidate, and stellar ages
skew progressively older toward the galaxy's center.
The
southwestern arm displays the same pattern, which is likely connected to
waves of star formation triggered by the galactic encounter.
A
2007 study by Cathy Horellou at Onsala Space Observatory in Sweden and
Baerbel Koribalski of the Australia National Telescope Facility
developed computer simulations of the collision that reproduced the
overall appearance of the system as we see it today. According to the
closest match, IC 4970 made its closest approach about 130 million years
ago and followed a path that took it nearly along the plane of the
spiral's disk in the same direction it rotates. The current study is
consistent with this picture.
As in all barred spirals, NGC
6872 contains a stellar bar component that transitions between the
spiral arms and the galaxy's central regions. Measuring about 26,000
light-years in radius, or about twice the average length found in nearby
barred spirals, it is a bar that befits a giant galaxy.
The
team found no sign of recent star formation along the bar, which
indicates it formed at least a few billion years ago. Its aged stars
provide a fossil record of the galaxy's stellar population before the
encounter with IC 4970 stirred things up.
"Understanding the
structure and dynamics of nearby interacting systems like this one
brings us a step closer to placing these events into their proper
cosmological context, paving the way to decoding what we find in
younger, more distant systems," said team member and Goddard
astrophysicist Eli Dwek.
The study also included Fernanda
Urrutia-Viscarra and Claudia Mendes de Oliveira at the University of Sao
Paulo in Brazil and Dimitri Gadotti at the European Southern
Observatory in Santiago, Chile.
The GALEX mission is led by
the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, which is responsible
for science operations and data analysis. NASA's Jet Propulsion
Laboratory, also in Pasadena, manages the mission and built the science
instrument. GALEX was developed under NASA's Explorers Program managed
by NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center. In May 2012, In May 2012, NASA
announced it was loaning GALEX to Caltech, which continues spacecraft
operations and data management using private funds.