Litcius/Paper detail

Galaxy spin direction distribution in<i>HST</i>and SDSS show similar large-scale asymmetry

Lior Shamir

2020Publications of the Astronomical Society of Australia16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Several recent observations using large data sets of galaxies showed non-random distribution of the spin directions of spiral galaxies, even when the galaxies are too far from each other to have gravitational interaction. Here, a data set of $\sim8.7\cdot10^3$ spiral galaxies imaged by Hubble Space Telescope ( HST ) is used to test and profile a possible asymmetry between galaxy spin directions. The asymmetry between galaxies with opposite spin directions is compared to the asymmetry of galaxies from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. The two data sets contain different galaxies at different redshift ranges, and each data set was annotated using a different annotation method. The results show that both data sets show a similar asymmetry in the COSMOS field, which is covered by both telescopes. Fitting the asymmetry of the galaxies to cosine dependence shows a dipole axis with probabilities of $\sim2.8\sigma$ and $\sim7.38\sigma$ in HST and SDSS, respectively. The most likely dipole axis identified in the HST galaxies is at $(\alpha=78^{\rm o},\delta=47^{\rm o})$ and is well within the $1\sigma$ error range compared to the location of the most likely dipole axis in the SDSS galaxies with $z&gt;0.15$ , identified at $(\alpha=71^{\rm o},\delta=61^{\rm o})$ .

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsAstrophysicsAsymmetryGalaxySkyRedshiftSpin (aerodynamics)DipoleGalaxy groupAstronomyRadio galaxyGravitationBrightest cluster galaxyDisc galaxyPeculiar galaxyGalaxy formation and evolutionLuminous infrared galaxyData setSatellite galaxyElliptical galaxyLenticular galaxyGalaxy mergerSpiral galaxyMass distributionDiscQuasarSigmaRedshift surveyGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, PhenomenaCosmology and Gravitation TheoriesAstronomy and Astrophysical Research