25 Mar 2021 - What Is Going On In The Constellation Of Taurus ??? ~ March 25th, 2021

Discussion in 'Astrology, Astronomy and Crop Circles' started by CULCULCAN, Mar 26, 2021.

  1. CULCULCAN

    CULCULCAN The Final Synthesis - isbn 978-0-9939480-0-8 Staff Member

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    MARCH 25, 2021

    25mar2021taurus.

    Something Invisible And Massive Is Tearing Apart
    The Nearest Star Cluster To Earth In The Head Of Taurus
    The Horned Bull.

    According to a new analysis of Gaia satellite data,
    the closest star cluster to our Solar System is currently being torn apart
    - disrupted not just by normal processes,
    but also by the gravitational pull of something massive we can't see.

    25 MAR 2021

    Something Invisible Is Tearing Apart The Nearest Star Cluster to Earth (sciencealert.com)

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    hyades_600.
    Hyades with tidal tails. (ESA/Gaia/DPAC)
    SPACE
    Something Invisible Is Tearing Apart
    The Nearest Star Cluster to Earth


    MICHELLE STARR
    25 MARCH 2021
    Strange things are afoot in the Milky Way.
    According to a new analysis of Gaia satellite data,
    the closest star cluster to our Solar System is currently being torn apart
    - disrupted not just by normal processes, but also by the gravitational pull of something massive we can't see.
    This disruption, astronomers say, could be a hint that an invisible clump
    of dark matter is nearby, wreaking gravitational havoc on anything
    within its reach.

    Actually, star clusters being pulled apart
    by gravitational forces is inevitable.

    A star cluster is, as the name suggests,
    a tight, dense concentration of stars.

    Even internally, the gravitational interactions
    can get pretty rowdy.

    Between those internal interactions and external galactic
    tidal forces

    • the gravity exerted by the galaxy itself - star clusters can end up pulled apart
    into rivers of stars: what is known as a tidal stream.

    These streams are hard to see in the sky,
    because it's often quite tricky to gauge stellar distances,
    and therefore group stars together. But the Gaia satellite
    has been working to map the Milky Way galaxy
    in three dimensions with the most detail
    and highest precision achievable,
    and the most accurate position
    and velocity data on as many stars as possible.

    Because stars pulled from a star cluster
    still share the same velocity
    (more or less) as the stars in the cluster,
    the Gaia data has helped astronomers
    identify many previously unknown tidal streams,
    and star clusters
    with tidal tails - threads of stars
    that have started to come loose
    from the cluster both in front and behind it.

    iN 2019, astronomers revealed they had found evidence
    in the second Gaia data release of tidal tails streaming
    from the Hyades; at 153 light-years away,
    it's the closest star cluster to Earth.

    This caught the attention of astronomer Tereza Jerabkova
    and her colleagues from the European Space Agency
    and the European Southern Observatory.

    When Gaia Data Release 2.5 (DR2.5) and DR3
    became available, they homed in,
    expanding the search parameters to catch the stars
    the earlier detections had missed.
    They found hundreds and hundreds
    of stars associated with the Hyades.

    The central cluster is about 60 light-years across;
    the tidal tails span thousands of light-years.

    Having such tails is fairly normal for a star cluster
    disrupted by galactic tidal forces,
    but the team noticed something weird.

    They ran simulations of the cluster's disruption,
    and found significantly more stars
    in the trailing tail of the simulation.

    In the real cluster, some stars are missing.
    The team ran more simulations to find out
    what could cause these stars
    to go astray - and found that an interaction
    with something big,
    about 10 million times the mass of the Sun,
    could reproduce the observed phenomenon.

    "There must have been a close interaction
    with this really massive clump,
    and the Hyades just got smashed," Jerabkova said.

    The big problem with that scenario is that we can't currently see
    anything that massive anywhere nearby.

    However, the Universe is actually full of invisible stuff - dark matter,
    the name we give to the mysterious mass whose existence
    we can only infer by its gravitational effects on the things we can see.

    According to these gravitational effects, scientists have calculated
    that roughly 80 percent of all matter in the Universe is dark matter.

    It's thought that dark matter is an essential part of galaxy formation - large
    clumps of it in the early Universe collected and shaped the normal matter
    into the galaxies we see today.
    dark-matter-halo. Schematic diagram of our galaxy's dark matter halo.
    (Digital Universe/American Museum of Natural History)

    Those dark matter clumps can still be found today
    in extended 'dark halos'
    around galaxies.

    The Milky Way has one thought to be 1.9 million light-years across.

    Within those halos, astronomers predict denser clumps,
    called dark matter subhalos, just drifting around.

    Future searches may turn up a structure that could have caused
    the weird disappearance of stars in the trailing tail of Hyades;
    if they don't, the researchers think the disruption could be the work
    of a dark matter subhalo.

    The finding also suggests that tidal streams and tidal tails
    could be excellent places to look for sources of mysterious
    gravitational interactions.

    "With Gaia, the way we see the Milky Way has completely changed,"
    Jerabkova said. "

    And with these discoveries, we will be able to map the Milky Way's
    sub-structures much better than ever before."

    The research has been published in Astronomy & Astrophysics.

    https://www.sciencealert.com/the-ne...A0vmLOfT-xuRxsEnmqoAl79s2l_0xrOz5csnByGotT9BI

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