Cloud Of Gas Discovered In Space Is Twice Larger Than The Milky Way Galaxy

Authored by en.koreaportal.com and submitted by BorisBukowsky

Cloud Of Gas Discovered In Space Is Twice Larger Than The Milky Way Galaxy

May 7th, 2017: A giant wave of gas was recently discovered by scientists in the Perseus Galaxy. This giant cloud of gas is over 200 million light years away, and scientists might actually know what caused it. The giant cloud of gas is 2x larger than our own Milky way galaxy.

Scientists believe the Perseus galaxy to have been grazed by a small Galaxy Cluster. This small graze must have caused a massive amount of gasses in the Perseus Galaxy to slosh around.

If the Galaxy is a lake and the Galaxy Cluster is a stone, then the giant cloud of gas found near the Perseus galaxy is a ripple 200,000 light years across created when the stone was dropped in the lake.

Scientists have decided to name this area of the Perseus Galaxy as "Bay". Radio observations made by Karl G Jansky Very Large Array in New Mexico showed that no emissions were coming from the Giant Cloud of Gas. This rules out the possibility of a black hole in the area.

Using this information, and the information provided by the Chandrayan, scientists were able to get 10.4 days of high-resolution data and 5.8 days of wide-field observations. They were also able to create a software that could run these simulations which led to the theory of a galaxy cluster grazing the Perseus Galaxy.

This infographic will help you better understand the details of the Giant Cloud of Gas and it also shows what the wave looks like. To learn more, visit NASA's official website

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Barking_at_the_Moon on May 8th, 2017 at 21:20 UTC »

This article is unspeakably ignorant. The "cloud" of gas is called the Perseus Cluster and it isn't twice the size of the Milky Way, it's more than 100 times the size of the Milky Way. What has scientists all excited is they have tentatively identified a special kind of wave in the gas and dust that is about 200,000 light-years across or twice the size of the Milky Way. This wave, a Kelvin-Helmholtz instability to be specific, is formed where differing currents in a fluid(s) establish a shear pattern. Sounds complicated and it is but it can also be very pretty.

adafada on May 8th, 2017 at 21:12 UTC »

So is Perseus a galaxy, a galaxy cluster, or both?

NoSkyIsTooHigh on May 8th, 2017 at 20:42 UTC »

May 7th, 2017: A giant wave of gas was recently discovered by scientists in the Perseus Galaxy.

I had no idea there were scientists in the Perseus Galaxy!