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Starts With A Bang #115 - Dwarf galaxies in isolation

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Manage episode 471570190 series 3545827
Content provided by Ethan Siegel. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Ethan Siegel or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

Sure, it's easy to look out at the Universe and take stock of what we find. Although spiral and elliptical galaxies house the majority of the Universe's stars, represented locally by galaxies like Andromeda and our own Milky Way, the overwhelming majority of galaxies are much smaller and lower in mass than we and our cousins are. These low-mass galaxies, the dwarf galaxies in the Universe, represent upwards of 97% of all the galaxies that exist.

However, while most of the dwarf galaxies we know of are found as satellites around larger, more massive galaxies, they aren't good laboratories for helping us understand the Universe as it was long ago. Back during the first few billion years of cosmic history, it wasn't just dwarf galaxies that formed the majority of starlight in the cosmos, but isolated dwarf galaxies: dwarf galaxies that hadn't yet interacted with larger neighbors.

We can best understand those early-stage galaxies by studying their late-time analogues: isolated dwarf galaxies in the Universe today. On this edition of the Starts With A Bang podcast, I sit down with Dr. Catherine (Cat) Fielder, and we talk about some of the nearest, most isolated galaxies of all: including some that have been imaged with flagship-quality telescopes. What have we learned about them so far, and what else are we hoping to discover? Find out here, today!

(This three panel image shows a ground-based, wide field view of the entirety of galaxy NGC 300: one of the closest spiral galaxies outside of our Local Group. Though this galaxy is relatively isolated, there are dwarf galaxies nearby it that are even more isolated than this galaxy itself, making them excellent objects to teach us how tiny galaxies grow up in isolation from large, major galaxies. Credit: ESA/Hubble and NASA)

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117 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 471570190 series 3545827
Content provided by Ethan Siegel. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Ethan Siegel or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

Sure, it's easy to look out at the Universe and take stock of what we find. Although spiral and elliptical galaxies house the majority of the Universe's stars, represented locally by galaxies like Andromeda and our own Milky Way, the overwhelming majority of galaxies are much smaller and lower in mass than we and our cousins are. These low-mass galaxies, the dwarf galaxies in the Universe, represent upwards of 97% of all the galaxies that exist.

However, while most of the dwarf galaxies we know of are found as satellites around larger, more massive galaxies, they aren't good laboratories for helping us understand the Universe as it was long ago. Back during the first few billion years of cosmic history, it wasn't just dwarf galaxies that formed the majority of starlight in the cosmos, but isolated dwarf galaxies: dwarf galaxies that hadn't yet interacted with larger neighbors.

We can best understand those early-stage galaxies by studying their late-time analogues: isolated dwarf galaxies in the Universe today. On this edition of the Starts With A Bang podcast, I sit down with Dr. Catherine (Cat) Fielder, and we talk about some of the nearest, most isolated galaxies of all: including some that have been imaged with flagship-quality telescopes. What have we learned about them so far, and what else are we hoping to discover? Find out here, today!

(This three panel image shows a ground-based, wide field view of the entirety of galaxy NGC 300: one of the closest spiral galaxies outside of our Local Group. Though this galaxy is relatively isolated, there are dwarf galaxies nearby it that are even more isolated than this galaxy itself, making them excellent objects to teach us how tiny galaxies grow up in isolation from large, major galaxies. Credit: ESA/Hubble and NASA)

  continue reading

117 episodes

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