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Milky Way keeps tight grip on its neighbour

The Large Magellanic Cloud is not breaking free of the Milky Way's cluster of galaxies after all, according to the latest measurements on our galaxy
(NASA/XRAY: LXL/JPL/CalTech/Sokulkani et al. Optical: STSCI/UIUC/Y. H. Chu and R. Williams et al. IR: R. Gehrz)
(NASA/XRAY: LXL/JPL/CalTech/Sokulkani et al. Optical: STSCI/UIUC/Y. H. Chu and R. Williams et al. IR: R. Gehrz)

OUR empire has struck back. Last year, astronomers got a shock when it emerged that our galaxy鈥檚 brightest companion, the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), appeared to be speeding through space so fast that we wouldn鈥檛 be able to hold onto it (New Scientist, 13 January 2007, p 13). Now two new measurements suggest the Milky Way will manage to keep its companion after all.

The first shows our galaxy to be spinning faster than we had thought. A star near the sun on a circular orbit round the galactic centre now appears to travel at 251 kilometres per second, compared with a previous figure of 220 km/s. And the centre of the galaxy now appears to be 27,400 light years from Earth, slightly further than the older figure of 26,100 light years.

Taken together, these findings imply that the Milky Way has about 50 per cent more mass than previously estimated, say Genevieve Shattow and Abraham Loeb of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Massachusetts (). This would make its gravity correspondingly stronger. And because astronomers measure the LMC鈥檚 speed relative to that of the sun, its estimated speed goes down 10 per cent, implying that it orbits the Milky Way every 6 billion years and reaches a maximum distance of 1.1 million light years. It is now 160,000 light years from Earth. The astronomers have submitted their work to Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.

Carlton Pryor of Rutgers University in New Jersey thinks the new work is probably correct. 鈥淲hen I saw this result, it was a little bit of an 鈥榓ha鈥 moment,鈥 he says. The Milky Way has torn a 300,000-light-year-long stream of gas out of the LMC. If it were approaching us for only the first time, Pryor says there wouldn鈥檛 have been enough time for the stream to have grown so large.