Saturday, 27 April 2024

 

 

LATEST NEWS Mann's roar in Majha!, starts AAP's election campaign in Gurdaspur for Shery Kalsi Mann in Amritsar -When the people of Majha make up their minds, they do not sway, this time they have decided to make AAP win Congress will provide 50 percent reservation to women in jobs: Lamba Haryana CEO takes first-of-its-kind initiative, State Voters to receive Wedding-Style Invitations for General Elections Wheat procurement gains pace as agencies procure 334283.4 MT grains Governor Shiv Pratap Shukla presents Road Safety Awards From Siliguri to a Chai Empire: How a Women Entrepreneur Brew a Successful Tea selling brand CHAIOM Science Fest organised at Rayat Bahra University Detaining the colonizer is a highly condemnable act - Gurjit Singh Aujla AIMS Mohali Observes DNA Day Vigilance Bureau Arrests Patwari Accepting Rs 10,000 Bribe For Mutation Of Land Vigilance Bureau Nabs Senior Assistant For Taking Rs 20,000 Bribe Vigilance Bureau Nabs Reader Of Sho Nri Police Station Taking Rs 20,000 Bribe SANY Heavy Industry India Pvt Ltd Expands Presence with Grand Opening of Raghunath Machinery HO in Rayagada, Odisha Ideathon 2K24 held at CGC Jhanjeri, 160 teams from various colleges participated Retailers Discuss Ways to Stay Ahead of the Curve at the RAI Hyderabad Retail Summit 2024 Bobby Deol Drives the Badass Seltos Hyundai Motor Group Executive Chair Euisun Chung Visits India to Underline Mid-to long-term Mobility Strategic Commitments Rupnagar police arrest accomplice of attackers involved in murder of VHP leader Vikas Prabhakar Complete exercise of identifying critical polling stations within this week : Sakshi Sawhney The impact of the Deputy Commissioner Dr. Senu Duggal strictness, a record jump in lifting in two days

 

NASA identifies impact of cosmic chaos on stars' birth

Listen to this article

Web Admin

Web Admin

5 Dariya News

Washington , 28 Oct 2014

The phenomenon that causes a bumpy airplane ride, turbulence, may give us a solution to a long-standing mystery about stars' birth, or the absence of it, says a study that uses data from NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory.Galaxy clusters are the largest objects in the universe, held together by gravity and they contain tens of thousands of inpidual galaxies immersed in gas with temperatures of millions of degrees.The evidence for turbulence comes from Chandra data on two enormous galaxy clusters named Perseus and Virgo.By analysing observation data of each cluster, the team was able to measure fluctuations in the density of the gas and this allowed them to estimate the amount of turbulence in the gas.

"Our work gives us an estimate of how much turbulence is generated in these clusters," said Alexander Schekochihin of University of Oxford.These results support the "feedback" model involving super massive black holes in the centers of galaxy clusters."We knew that somehow the gas in clusters is being heated to prevent it cooling and forming stars. The question was exactly how," said Irina Zhuravleva of Stanford University in Palo Alto, California, who led the study.Previous studies show super massive black holes pump vast quantities of energy around them in powerful jets of energetic particles that create cavities in the hot gas.

Zhuravleva and her colleagues have now provided new insight into how energy can be transferred from these cavities to the surrounding gas.

The interaction of the cavities with the gas may be generating turbulence, or chaotic motion, which then disperses to keep the gas hot for billions of years, suggested the study.While a merger between two galaxy clusters may also produce turbulence, the outbursts from super massive black holes are the main source of this cosmic commotion in the dense centres of many clusters, concluded researchers.The study appeared in the journal Nature.

 

Tags: nasa

 

 

related news

 

 

 

Photo Gallery

 

 

Video Gallery

 

 

5 Dariya News RNI Code: PUNMUL/2011/49000
© 2011-2024 | 5 Dariya News | All Rights Reserved
Powered by: CDS PVT LTD