Scientists find Milky Way weighs less than expected
Monday, 04 August 2014
A team of scientists from
Edinburgh University has found that the Milky Way galaxy is a lot lighter than
we thought. It has about half the mass of a neighboring galaxy, known as
Andromeda. VoR's Brendan Cole spoke to Dr Jorge Penarrubia who headed the
study.
Dr Jorge Penarrubia told
VoR: “There has been a long-standing controversy over the calculations of
the Milky Way mass and the Andromeda 51 masses. It has been uncertain for a
number of years now.
“What we did was to try to
measure both of them simultaneously using the same data set. That’s the novelty
of our approach, really.
“We measured the total mass of
the Milky Way, plus the Andromeda masses. We got both masses, now, accurately
determined, we think.
“Our results indicate that the
Milky Way mass is about half the mass of Andromeda. Dark matter is the problem.
What we can do is to measure the position and velocities of objects we can see,
for example, stars and gas. But the problem is that those objects seem to be
located mostly in the inner regions of galaxies and when we go and measure
those velocities, what we see is that the further away we go from the center of
a galaxy, the more mass there seems to be. And that’s in contradiction to what
we see.
“The number of visible objects is
falling off very quickly. This is commonly interpreted as evidence of dark
matter. But it poses a big problem, because since we don’t have any more
visible objects out there, then we cannot really tell, historically, we have
not been able to tell what was the total mass of a galaxy.
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