BEIJING, March 25, 2022 (Xinhua) Astronomers have drawn an accurate map of how our galaxy, the Milky Way, formed and evolved in its beginning and emerging stages, using space survey data obtained by the Large Sky Multi-Object Fiber Spectroscope (LAMOST) in China, and the satellite (Lamost) in China. Gaia) of the European Space Agency.
The study was published last Thursday in the journal (Nature) as a main story for the cover of the magazine, as the study included an analysis of regarding 250 thousand giant stars with very accurate ages, noting that the formation of the ancient thick disk of the galaxy began regarding 13 billion years ago, that is, following only 800 million years. From the history of the cosmic big bang.
Chiang Maosheng and Hans Walter Rex of the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy analyzed millions of spectra of stars monitored by Lamost, as well as the positions and motions of 1.4 billion stars monitored by the Gaia satellite.
The results showed that the evolution of the galaxy can be divided into two parts: the early stage from 13 billion years ago to 8 billion years ago, when the stellar halo and the thick disk formed, and the later stage when the thin disk formed.
Most of those stars formed in a thick disk regarding 11 billion years ago, when Gaia Susig, the remnant of a dwarf galaxy, merged with our own, adding at least eight globular clusters along with 50 billion solar masses of stars, gas and dark matter.
Over the five to six billion years following that date, the galaxy experienced a continuous enrichment of chemical elements, eventually reaching a factor of 10, while the star-forming gas managed to remain in a good mixed state, according to the study.
The researchers said that the age, composition and movement of these stars have shed light on the dynamic processes that interacted to form our galaxy.