Astronomy

(Nancy Kaufman) #1

ASTRONEWS


6.9%
CAPRICORNUS

0.5%
CETUS

2.2%
SCORPIUS

5.3%
OPHIUCHUS

8.^4


%






4 %


11


.^6


%


(^7).
(^6) %
(^6). 0
%
(^9). (^8) %
CA
NC
ER
L
E
O
1
4


. 0
%


(^6). 4
% 8.^1
%
6


.^9


%


PI
SC
ES

AR
IE
S

TAURU
S

V
IR
G
O

LIB
RA SAGITT

AR

IUS

AQ

UA

RI

US

GEM

INI

FAST
FAC T

Mars reaches opposition
24 times during this 50-year
period, with the most (four)
coming within the borders
of Leo the Lion.

WWW.ASTRONOMY.COM 19

MARS IN MOTION


T


he Milky Way and the Andromeda
Galaxy (M31) are giant spiral galax-
ies. And in about 4 billion years,
they will collide in a gravitational
sumo match that will ultimately
bind them forever. Previously, astronomers
believed that Andromeda would dominate
with a mass up to three times that of the
Milky Way. But new research suggests we’ve
overestimated our opponent.
In a study published February 14 in the
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical
Society, a team of Australian astronomers
announced that Andromeda is not actually
the heavyweight we once thought it was.
Instead, they found that our nearest large
galactic neighbor is more or less the same
mass as the Milky Way — some 800 billion
times the mass of the Sun.
To determine Andromeda’s mass, the
team studied the orbits of high-velocity
planetary nebulae, which contain aging
stars moving at high speeds. They coupled
their observations with a technique that
calculates the speed required for a quick-
moving star to escape the gravitational pull
of its host galaxy. The speed needed for
ejection is known as escape velocity.
“When a rocket is launched into space, it
is thrown out with a speed of 11 kilometers

per second [6.8 miles per second] to over-
come the Earth’s gravitational pull,” Prajwal
Kaf le of the University of Western Australia
branch of the International Centre for
Radio Astronomy Research said in a press
release. “Our home galaxy, the Milky Way,
is over a trillion times heavier than our tiny
planet Earth, so to escape its gravitational
pull, we have to launch with a speed of 550
kilometers per second [342 miles per sec-
ond]. We used this technique to tie down

SIZING UP


ANDROMEDA


the mass of Andromeda.”
This is not the first time a galaxy’s mass
has been recalculated based on its escape
velocity. In 2014, Kaf le used a similar tech-
nique to revise the mass of the Milky Way,
showing that our galaxy has much less dark
matter — a mysterious form of matter that
has gravity but does not interact with light
— than previously thought.
Much like the 2014 study, this paper sug-
gests that previous research has overesti-
mated the amount of dark matter present in
the Andromeda Galaxy. “By examining the
orbits of high-speed stars, we discovered
that [Andromeda] has far less dark matter
than previously thought,” said Kafle.
Although revising down Andromeda’s
overall mass may seem like it should help
the Milky Way out during our eventual
collision, the researchers say that new simu-
lations are first needed to determine exactly
how the galaxies’ eventual meeting will
go down. But no matter what happens in
4 billion years, Kaf le says the new finding
“completely transforms our understanding
of the Local Group” of galaxies, which is
dominated gravitationally by Andromeda
and the Milky Way.
For now, it appears we can take solace in
the newfound knowledge that the Milky
Way is not nearly as overpowered by
Andromeda as we once thought. As
University of Sydney astrophysicist Geraint
Lewis said, “We can put this gravitational
arms race to rest.” — J.P.

LONE STAR. S2, a star that will test general relativity when it swings by our galaxy’s supermassive black hole this year,
does not have a significant binary companion. If such a companion had existed, it may have complicated measurements.

A ZODIACAL JOURNEY. The
Red Planet takes 1.88 years to circle
the Sun. During a typical orbit,
Mars spends the most time in the
constellation where it executes its
retrograde loop — the apparent
backward motion that occurs when
Earth overtakes the outer planet
around the time of opposition. To
average out this effect, here we
chart the percentage of time Mars
spends in each constellation along
the zodiac during the 21st century’s
first half. — Richard Talcott

ASTRONOMY


: ROEN KELLY


MATCHING MASS. The Andromeda Galaxy, shown here in an ultraviolet image from NASA’s Galaxy Evolution
Explorer, is roughly the same mass as the Milky Way, not three times as massive, as previously thought.

NASA/JPL-CALTECH
Free download pdf