Thursday, April 3, 2014

Newscenter Update: Hubble Finds That Monster 'El Gordo' Galaxy Cluster Is Bigger Than Thought

April 3, 2014
Galaxy Cluster 'El Gordo' with Mass Map
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Hubble Finds That Monster 'El Gordo' Galaxy Cluster Is Bigger Than Thought

If someone told you there was an object in space called "El Gordo" (Spanish for "the fat one") you might imagine some kind of planet-eating monster straight out of a science fiction movie. The nickname refers to a monstrous cluster of galaxies that is being viewed at a time when the universe was just half of its current age of 13.8 billion years. This is an object of superlatives. It contains several hundred galaxies swarming around under a collective gravitational pull. The total mass of the cluster, and refined in new Hubble measurements, is estimated to be as much as 3 million billion stars like our Sun (about 3,000 times more massive than our own Milky Way galaxy) — though most of the mass is hidden away as dark matter. The cluster may be so huge because it is the result of a titanic collision and merger between two separate galaxy clusters. Thankfully, our Milky Way galaxy grew up in an uncluttered backwater region of the universe.

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