The Eye of Terror is expanding.
The God Emperor is faltering on his Golden Throne.
If this is widespread and cuts the potential 'lifespan' of these galaxies by a significant amount, wouldn't it mean that our current models of the long-term future of the universe are wrong by a few billion years?
If this is widespread and cuts the potential 'lifespan' of these galaxies by a significant amount, wouldn't it mean that our current models of the long-term future of the universe are wrong by a few billion years?
Maybe we're overdoing the warpspeed travel, guys.
Damn if broly
damn halo 6 viral marketing is starting early.
lol i was thinking the same. Damn flood
It's Remina.
My bet is Necrons.
Ok, I will try to explain this as best as I can.
All galaxies have roughly spherical halo of Dark Matter around them. This extra mass is enough to account for the anomalous rotation curves of galaxies, which show that the luminous matter in the form of stars and gas is not enough to account for the large rotation speed of the galaxy far from the center.
This paper refers to satellite galaxies. As the name indicates, these are galaxies that are orbiting a larger galaxy. An example being the Large Magellanic Cloud, which is a satellite of the Milky Way.
These satellite galaxies are moving in the larger Dark Matter Halo that envelops the galaxy they are orbiting, and in moving through this medium they interact with each other and the surrounding interstellar gas.
What this paper shows is that satellite galaxies in denser halos tend
to have less gas in them, which quenches star formation. The hypothesis is that this gas was stripped as the galaxy plunges though the intergalatic medium, which is full of very very hot (T~10^7 K), tenuous and very very tenous gas (density~10^4 cm^3). The effect is analogous to what happens to a meteorite when it rams into our atmosphere.
Now, this does not mean that the Dark Matter is directly stripping the gas, which cannot happen, since by interactions between DM and ordinary matter are only gravitational, and so very weak. What seems to be happening is that in denser haloes, the gravitational force on the satellite galaxies is larger and so the galaxies tend to move through the medium at a faster speed, increasing the friction and the stripping of their gas. Galaxies with less gas in them have less material to make new stars with, hence, their "death".
Needless to say, don't panic, this has nothing to do with doomsday scenarios and even if it was happening to the Milky Way, you wouldn't even notice it.
It took 3 pages for an actual post xdOk, I will try to explain this as best as I can.
All galaxies have roughly spherical halo of Dark Matter around them. This extra mass is enough to account for the anomalous rotation curves of galaxies, which show that the luminous matter in the form of stars and gas is not enough to account for the large rotation speed of the galaxy far from the center.
This paper refers to satellite galaxies. As the name indicates, these are galaxies that are orbiting a larger galaxy. An example being the Large Magellanic Cloud, which is a satellite of the Milky Way.
These satellite galaxies are moving in the larger Dark Matter Halo that envelops the galaxy they are orbiting, and in moving through this medium they interact with each other and the surrounding interstellar gas.
What this paper shows is that satellite galaxies in denser halos tend
to have less gas in them, which quenches star formation. The hypothesis is that this gas was stripped as the galaxy plunges though the intergalatic medium, which is full of very very hot (T~10^7 K), tenuous and very very tenous gas (density~10^4 cm^3). The effect is analogous to what happens to a meteorite when it rams into our atmosphere.
Now, this does not mean that the Dark Matter is directly stripping the gas, which cannot happen, since by interactions between DM and ordinary matter are only gravitational, and so very weak. What seems to be happening is that in denser haloes, the gravitational force on the satellite galaxies is larger and so the galaxies tend to move through the medium at a faster speed, increasing the friction and the stripping of their gas. Galaxies with less gas in them have less material to make new stars with, hence, their "death".
Needless to say, don't panic, this has nothing to do with doomsday scenarios and even if it was happening to the Milky Way, you wouldn't even notice it.
Nah, the real concern would be a gamma ray burst.We could get wiped out just like that.
Oh wow, first time seeing this. On 2D field view, this is legit terrifying.Eye of Terror?
If only the reality were so kind.
Oh no its "reference to villainous sci-fi race"
I immediately thought of this video by Kurzgesagt about Vacuum Decay:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ijFm6DxNVyI
Which will destroy us faster? Trump or the halo?