https://www.engineeringnews.co.za
Africa|Energy|Gas|Proximity
Africa|Energy|Gas|Proximity
africa|energy|gas|proximity

South African radio telescope array makes another breakthrough

A view of some of the MeerKAT array’s dishes.

A view of some of the MeerKAT array’s dishes.

Photo by South African Radio Astronomy Observatory

18th January 2021

By: Rebecca Campbell

Creamer Media Senior Deputy Editor

     

Font size: - +

South Africa’s world-leading 64-dish radio telescope array MeerKAT, which was inaugurated in July 2018, has registered another significant success and again increased our knowledge of the cosmos. In a study published on Monday in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, a team of three scientists from South African and British universities reported that, by using MeerKAT, they had located two previously unknown giant radio galaxies.

Significantly, the two new discoveries were both located in the same small area of the sky. Also important was the fact that previous radio telescope surveys of that part of the sky, including by the Karl G Jansky Very Large Array in the US and the Giant Metre-Wave Radio Telescope in India, had failed to detect them.

“We found these giant radio galaxies in a region of the sky which is only about four times the area of the full Moon, though the galaxies are much further away and much larger than the Moon,” highlighted study lead author and University of Cape Town research fellow Dr Jacinta Delhaize. “Based on our current knowledge of the density of giant radio galaxies in the sky, the probability of finding two of them in this region is extremely small. This means that giant radio galaxies are probably far more common then we thought.”

“The MeerKAT telescope is the best of its kind in the world,” affirmed study co-author and Oxford University senior researcher Dr Ian Heywood. “We have managed to identify these giant radio galaxies for the first time because of MeerKAT’s unprecedented sensitivity to faint and diffuse radio light.”

Radio galaxies are galaxies which are shooting forth gigantic jets of electromagnetic radiation in the radio wavelengths. These transmissions are called ‘radio light’ by astronomers. The jets are connected with supermassive black holes in the centres of these galaxies. 

What happens is that when large quantities of interstellar dust and gas are attracted to the black hole, and start orbiting and falling into it, huge amounts of energy, including charged particles, are released. In some, but not all galaxies, these charged particles interact with strong magnetic fields in the proximity of the black hole, and the result is huge jets of radio light shooting out of the galactic core, pretty much perpendicular to the plane of the galaxy concerned.

These jets shoot vast distances into intergalactic space and can extent much further than the galaxy itself. But while the number of known radio galaxies runs into the many hundreds of thousands, the vast majority have jets of radio light of 700 000 parsecs or less. (A parsec is equivalent to 3.26 light years, or more than 30-trillion kilometres.) Only some 800 radio galaxies with radio light jets that exceed 700 000 parsecs (a distance which is some 22 times the size of the Milky Way) are known. These are known as giant radio galaxies. 

The two giants discovered by MeerKAT have jets that are greater than two-million parsecs in length, which is about 6.5-million light years, or some 62 times, the size of the Milky Way. “Yet they are fainter than others of the same size,” pointed out study co-author and University of the Western Cape research dellow Dr Matthew Prescott. “We suspect that many more galaxies like these should exist, because of the way we think galaxies should grow and change over their lifetimes.”

 

Edited by Creamer Media Reporter

Comments

Showroom

Actom image
Actom

Your one-stop global energy-solution partner

VISIT SHOWROOM 
Booyco Electronics
Booyco Electronics

Booyco Electronics, South African pioneer of Proximity Detection Systems, offers safety solutions for underground and surface mining, quarrying,...

VISIT SHOWROOM 

Latest Multimedia

sponsored by

Photo of Martin Creamer
On-The-Air (26/04/2024)
Updated 5 hours ago By: Martin Creamer
Magazine cover image
Magazine round up | 26 April 2024
26th April 2024

Option 1 (equivalent of R125 a month):

Receive a weekly copy of Creamer Media's Engineering News & Mining Weekly magazine
(print copy for those in South Africa and e-magazine for those outside of South Africa)
Receive daily email newsletters
Access to full search results
Access archive of magazine back copies
Access to Projects in Progress
Access to ONE Research Report of your choice in PDF format

Option 2 (equivalent of R375 a month):

All benefits from Option 1
PLUS
Access to Creamer Media's Research Channel Africa for ALL Research Reports, in PDF format, on various industrial and mining sectors including Electricity; Water; Energy Transition; Hydrogen; Roads, Rail and Ports; Coal; Gold; Platinum; Battery Metals; etc.

Already a subscriber?

Forgotten your password?

MAGAZINE & ONLINE

SUBSCRIBE

RESEARCH CHANNEL AFRICA

SUBSCRIBE

CORPORATE PACKAGES

CLICK FOR A QUOTATION







sq:0.088 0.148s - 155pq - 3rq
Subscribe Now