Dwarf galaxies create new stars just like bigger galaxies do — but for decades, researchers haven’t been able to find the same star-forming ingredients inside of them. An astronomer at Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff helped explain the mystery.
In galaxies, dense cold clouds of molecules act as nurseries for new stars. Astronomers detect these clouds by looking for carbon monoxide.
Lowell Observatory astronomer Deidre Hunter studies dwarf galaxies.
“They’re forming stars, so we expect them to have molecular clouds,” she said. “But this molecular material has been very hard to detect.”
Hunter and her colleagues mapped a nearby dwarf galaxy called WLM with a telescope array in Chile. They discovered tiny molecular clouds hidden inside — much smaller than they expected.
“I tell kids, when I tell them about this project, (I say): we looked in this bowl expecting to see a peach and instead we saw half a dozen raisons,” Hunter said.
Hunter said all dwarf galaxies might form stars this way. The next step is look for these overlooked pockets of carbon monoxide elsewhere in the universe.
The research appeared last month in the journal "Nature."
WLM_Animation_English from NRAO Outreach on Vimeo.