• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Astronomers Baffled To Find Andromeda’s Satellite Galaxies Are Pointing In Our Direction

April 30, 2025 by Deborah Bloomfield

Astronomers taking a close look at our nearest neighbor galaxy have made a highly unusual and model-challenging discovery; the vast majority of its satellite galaxies appear to be pointing in our direction.

According to our best model of galaxy formation, the standard model, galaxies grow as smaller dwarf galaxies are pulled in by gravitational interactions, aided by a vast amount of dark matter. Smaller satellite galaxies we see around larger galaxies like Andromeda or our own Milky Way are thought, essentially, to be there because they haven’t fallen in quite yet.

“Astronomers suspect that dwarf spheroidal galaxies may be leftovers of the kind of cosmic objects that were shredded and melded by gravitational interactions to build the halos of large galaxies,” NASA explained in August 2024. 

“Curiously, studies have found that several of the Andromeda Galaxy’s dwarf galaxies, including Andromeda III, orbit in a flat plane around the galaxy, like the planets in our solar system orbit around the Sun. The alignment is puzzling because models of galaxy formation don’t show dwarf galaxies falling into such orderly formations, but rather moving around the galaxy randomly in all directions. As they slowly lose energy, the dwarf galaxies merge into the larger galaxy.”

That problem, identified by earlier studies, has been amplified by the new study. That study looked at Andromeda, also termed Messier 31 or M31, and found that its satellites are not in the random distribution that cosmologists expect from the standard model.

“All but one of Andromeda’s 37 satellite galaxies are contained within 107° of our Galaxy. In standard cosmological simulations, less than 0.3% (0.5% when accounting for possible observational incompleteness) of Andromeda-like systems show a comparably significant asymmetry,” the team explains in their paper. “Around 80% of M31’s satellites lie within a hemispheric region facing the Milky Way.”



A visual representation of what that looks like, from the always excellent Anton Petrov.

According to the team, the asymmetry could pose a challenge to the standard model of cosmology.

“Even when accounting for the look-elsewhere effect, similarly lopsided configurations of satellites only occur around <0>

“At present, no known formation mechanism can explain the collective asymmetry of the Andromeda system. In conjunction with M31’s plane of satellites, which holds a similar degree of tension with simulations, our results present the satellite galaxy system of Andromeda as a striking outlier from expectations in ΛCDM cosmology.”

However, before anyone declares our best model to be severely lacking, astronomers need to rule out other possibilities, such as that distance measurements of fainter satellite galaxies are inaccurate, or Andromeda and its satellites being a strange outlier with an unusual recent history.

“The following is speculation, but I expect the underlying culprit behind the M31 system’s discrepancy with cosmological expectations to be some unique accretion history,” Kosuke Jamie Kanehisa of the Institut für Physik und Astronomie at Universität Potsdam in Germany, and lead author of the paper, told Space.com. “The fact that we see M31’s satellites in this unstable configuration today — which is strange, to say the least — may point towards many having fallen in recently, possibly related to the major merger thought to have been experienced by Andromeda around two to three billion years ago.”

Further observations of Andromeda’s satellites, particularly the fainter ones, are needed.

The study is published in Nature Astronomy.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Bolivian president calls for global debt relief for poor countries
  2. Five Seasons Ventures pulls in €180M fund to tackle human health and climate via FoodTech
  3. Humanity’s Journey To A Metal-Rich Asteroid Launches Today. Here’s How To Watch
  4. Unexplained And Deadly Heat Wave Hotspots Are Showing Up Across The Planet

Source Link: Astronomers Baffled To Find Andromeda's Satellite Galaxies Are Pointing In Our Direction

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Have You Seen This Snake? Florida Wants Your Help Finding Rare Species Seen Once In 50 Years
  • Plague Confirmed In Lake Tahoe Area For First Time In 5 Years, California Officials Say
  • Supergiant Star Spotted Blowing Milky Way’s Largest Bubble Of Its Kind, Surprising Astronomers
  • Game Theory Promised To Explain Human Decisions. Did It?
  • Genes, Hormones, And Hairstyling – Here Are Some Causes Of Hair Loss You Might Not Have Heard Of
  • Answer To 30-Year-Old Mystery Code Embedded In The Kryptos CIA Sculpture To Be Sold At Auction
  • Merry Mice: Human Brain Cells Transplanted Into Mice Reduce Anxiety And Depression
  • Asteroid-Bound NASA Mission Snaps Earth-Moon Portrait From 290 Million Kilometers Away
  • Forget State Mammals – Some States Have Official Dinosaurs, And They’re Awesome
  • Female Jumping Spiders Of Two Species Prefer The Sexy Red Males Of One, Leading To Hybridization
  • Why Is It So Difficult To Find New Moons In The Solar System?
  • New “Oxygen-Breathing” Crystal Could Recharge Fuel Cells And More
  • Some Gut Bacteria Cause Insomnia While Others Protect Against It, 400,000-Person Study Argues
  • Neanderthals And Homo Sapiens Got It On 100,000 Years Earlier Than We Thought
  • “Womb Of The Universe”: Native American Tribal Elders Help Archaeologists Decipher Ancient Rock Art In Missouri Cave
  • 16,000-Year-Old Paintings Suggest Prehistoric Humans Risked Their Lives To Enter “Shaman Training Cave”
  • Final Gasps Of A Dying Star Seen Through A Record-Breaking 130 Years Of Data
  • COVID-19 “Vaccine Alternative” Injection Could Be On Fast-Track To Approval From FDA
  • New Jersey Officials Investigate Possible First Locally Acquired Malaria Case Since 1991
  • First-of-Its-Kind Bright Orange Nurse Shark Recorded Off Costa Rica Makes History
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version