|      Some dwarf galaxies in the early universe travelled so    fast that their gas was stripped from them, according to a new computer    simulation. This cosmic vanishing act    could help explain a long-standing mystery: astronomers observe fewer dwarf    galaxies in the "Local Group" — the    collection of galaxies near the Milky Way — than what models of the    universe's formation predict. But if these galaxies are    losing gas, that could explain why they don't appear as plentiful as they    should. Because these dwarf    galaxies were so small when they formed, they don't have large reserves of    gas to begin with. Stripping any gas away would leave these galaxies so small    and dim that they would be all but invisible from Earth.  "This is something    that came out of the simulations, and had not been anticipated, and had not    been seen before. It was an interesting discovery," said Julio Navarro, a University of Victoria astronomer    and co-author of a paper describing the discovery. The study, published in    the Feb. 1 issue of Astrophysical Journal Letters, was led by graduate studentAlejandro    Benitez-Llambay from the University of Cordoba in Argentina.  Courting CLUES Past supercomputer    simulations show there should be a huge number of dwarf galaxies, together    making up one one-thousandth of the Milky Way's mass, scattered around the    local environment. But a 1999 study pointed out that the dwarf galaxies we    see are not representative of the calculated mass. In the past, astronomers    suggested that the energy from supernovas, as well as ultraviolet rays    permeating the universe, might alter the dwarf galaxies as they form. There    were weaknesses with these models, however. Observed supernova energy is too    low to affect dwarf galaxy formation, and the ultraviolet rays only shrink    the smallest of dwarf galaxies. To better examine the    issue, the new study focused on how dwarf galaxies evolved in the early    stages of the universe. Astronomers ran a simulation tracking dark matter    halos that duplicate the positions of the three largest galaxies in the Local    Group: the Milky Way, Andromeda (M31) and Triangulum (M33). Next, they re-ran the    simulation to focus on one small area in much higher resolution. This allowed    them to examine dwarf galaxy evolution in detail. "We constrained and    controlled the numbers to resemble our local environment," Navarro said. The tool they used was    called Constrained Local UniversE Simulations, or CLUES for short. The    project, led by the Leibniz Institute for Astrophysics, can simulate the    positions and speeds of galaxies within 10 million light years of the Milky    Way. Passing the    cosmic speed limit CLUES revealed that the    farthest dwarf galaxies in the Local Group are flying very quickly through    the cosmic web of dark matter and ordinary matter that makes up our universe. When the galaxies pass a    given speed, the ram pressure between the dwarf galaxies and this cosmic web    strips the galaxies' gas away. It's similar to how the matter gets stripped    away from a meteor as it rams through the Earth's atmosphere. "The galaxy moves at    high speed, and the gas strips out and stays behind the galaxy," said    Stefan Gottlöber, a Leibniz astronomer who leads CLUES.    He was also a co-author on the new paper. While the gas is all but    invisible, we might be able to see the effects gas stripping has had on the    galaxies. The astronomers noted that dwarf galaxies are a diverse bunch, with    some looking like gas clouds and others filled with stars. Gas stripping    could explain why star formation stopped, the scientists suggested. Navarro, Gottloeber and    their collaborators plan another run with CLUES to simulate a larger area to    test whether the dwarf galaxy stripping in the Local Group is representative    of the entire universe.  Copyright 2013 SPACE.com,    a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be    published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.  |    
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