Dark Galaxies

Tuesday, February 26, 2008 posted by Stars & Astronomy

In the year 2001 Davis Disnes and his colligues detected VIRG0H121 in the virgo culster about 5 million light years away - an invisible galaxy made almost entirely of - the first ever detected. A dark galaxy is an area in the universe containing a large amount of mass that rotates like a galaxy, but contains no stars. Without any stars to give light, it could only be found using radio telescopes. The big Question is does a Dark Galaxy really exist? Devoid of light and gas? The question is associated with understanding how the universe bloosomed from the big bang as we consider. According to increasingly refined story 85% of the matter in the universe is not ordinary baryonic matter-that makes up galaxies and stars and planets. Rather it is . As the universe grew from its infancy, the condensed in to enormous filaments like tubes, clumps and haloes. These weighty objects pooled in hydrogen gas which formed the galaxies and stars. Simulations show that should have myriad clumps between 1/1000 and 1/1000,000 as massive as our milky way galaxy. At first these small haloes should have accumulated gas and lit up as small dwarf galaxies thousands of which should whiz around Milky Way. So far astronomy could have few near by. Various factors kept the small halos dark. So space should have many dark galaxies.

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