ScienceIQ.com

Lightning Striking Again

What's hotter than the surface of the sun, moves with incredible speed, lasts a few seconds and goes out with a bang? If you said lightning, you're right. Lightning strikes cause thousands of forest fires every year and occasionally cause the death of people. Few who have been hit by lightning live to tell the tale. Yet the process that causes ...

Continue reading...

LightningStrike
Biology

What's So Funny?

There's an oft-repeated scientific definition of laughter as one or more forcibly voiced, acoustically symmetric, vowel-like notes (75 ms duration) separated by regular intervals (210-218 ms), and a ... Continue reading

Laughter
Astronomy

Black Hole Sound Waves

Astronomers using NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory have found, for the first time, sound waves from a supermassive black hole. The 'note' is the deepest ever detected from any object in our Universe. ... Continue reading

BlackHoleSoundWaves
Medicine

Ultrasound In Medicine

In medical testing, ultrasound equipment is used to produce a sonogram, or a picture of organs inside the body. Ultrasound scanners do not use X-rays. They use waves of such high frequency that they ... Continue reading

UltrasoundInMedicine
Mathematics

How To Calculate The Volume Of A Right Cone

Cones are used every day for a variety of purposes. Perhaps the most useful application of the cone shape is as a funnel. For finding the volume, a cone is best viewed as a stack of circles, each one ... Continue reading

VolumeOfARight Cone

Galaxy Cluster RDCS 1252.9-2927

GalaxyClusterRDCS125292927A color composite image of the galaxy cluster RDCS 1252.9-2927 shows the X-ray (purple) light from 70-million-degree Celsius gas in the cluster, and the optical (red, yellow and green) light from the galaxies in the cluster. X-ray data from Chandra and the XMM-Newton Observatory show that this cluster was fully formed more than 8 billion years ago, and has a mass at least 200 trillion times that of the Sun. At a distance of 8.5 billion light years, it is the most massive cluster ever observed at such an early stage in the evolution of the universe. Even though the cluster is seen as it was only 5 billion years after the Big Bang, it has an abundance of elements such as silicon, sulfur, and iron similar to that of clusters observed at more recent epochs.

The cluster gas must have been enriched by heavy elements synthesized in stars and ultimately ejected from the galaxies. The relative abundances of these heavy elements are indicators of the star formation history of the galaxies. The observations of RDCS 1252.9-2927 are consistent with the theory that most of the heavy elements were produced by massive stars some 11 billion years ago. The large mass of the cluster is also significant. The currently favored theory for the formation of clusters is that they are formed from the merger of many sub-clusters in a universe dominated by cold dark matter - hypothetical subatomic particles left over from the dense early universe. Cold dark matter gets its name from the assumption that these dark matter particles were moving slowly when galaxies and galaxy clusters began to form.

Because the merging process takes time, there is a limit to how fast a cluster can grow and therefore how massive it can be at early epochs. The existence of one cluster as massive as RDCS 1252.9-2927 is consistent with the cold dark matter hypothesis, but the discovery of more such massive galaxy clusters would pose a serious challenge. A major test will come as astronomers search for evolutionary links between RDCS 1252.9-2927 and the recently discovered proto-clusters such as 4C41.17 and 3C294 that were forming 12 billion years ago.