(Press-News.org) We usually think of satellites as small objects orbiting planets or stars. But in the broader universe, galaxies themselves can have satellites—smaller galaxies bound by gravity that orbit a larger host, carrying with them stars, gas, dust, and dark matter.
Most of what we know about satellite galaxies comes from studying the Milky Way and other similarly large galaxies. But a new study led by Dartmouth astronomers broadens that understanding by exploring the satellites of dwarf galaxies—systems less than a tenth the size of the Milky Way.
The multi-institutional survey triples the number of dwarf galaxies surveyed for satellites, the researchers report in The Astrophysical Journal. The study identifies 355 candidate satellite galaxies, including 264 that were previously undocumented. The researchers suggest that 134 of these candidates are highly likely to be satellite galaxies.
"Studying these systems can help us piece together conditions in the early universe," says author Burçin Mutlu-Pakdil, an assistant professor of physics and astronomy at Dartmouth.
"This project fills a critical gap, offering fresh insights into the process of how galaxies form and its connection to dark matter," Mutlu-Pakdil says. "Our goal is to build a statistical sample of the smallest galaxies in the universe, as they are the most dominated by dark matter and serve as clean laboratories for understanding its nature."
By analyzing the satellite galaxies orbiting host galaxies of various sizes and environments, the researchers aim to uncover how external conditions influence satellite formation. For instance, studies of large, Milky Way-sized galaxies suggest that larger galaxies tend to host a greater number of satellite galaxies.
"With this survey, we'll be able to test whether those predictions hold true with much smaller host galaxies," says Laura Hunter, a postdoctoral fellow in Mutlu-Pakdil's research group and corresponding author of the study.
"Astronomy is a field where you can't run experiments," Hunter says. "All you can do is observe and make as many measurements as you can, and then put that data into a simulation and see whether it reproduces your observations. If it doesn't, that tells us that there's something wrong with our assumptions or our model of the universe."
To search for dwarf satellites, the team analyzed publicly available imaging data from the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) Legacy Imaging Surveys. In addition to Hunter and Mutlu-Pakdil, co-authors of the study include Dartmouth graduate student Emmanuel Durodola and Rowan Goebel-Bain '25.
The researchers selected 36 host galaxies to investigate. The hosts varied in size and in proximity to other galaxies, both of which are factors that could impact satellite formation. The team used an algorithm to remove "noise" from the images, such as bright sources of light from other stars or galaxies, and to identify objects that could be satellite galaxies. They then visually inspected each candidate satellite to rule out those that were due to image defects or faint light halos around bright stars or galaxies.
This survey is the first step towards understanding how dwarf satellites differ from the satellite galaxies of larger hosts. The team is currently conducting a follow-up campaign to confirm that the candidate satellites are indeed satellite galaxies, and to characterize properties such as their size, distribution, how much gas and debris they contain, and their rates of star formation.
"Getting the answers will require a lot of resources and telescope time, but the impact will be incredible for understanding the nature of dark matter and galaxy formation at the smallest scale," Mutlu-Pakdil says. "Each one of them holds a little clue about the physics of how galaxies form."
END
New survey maps hundreds of satellite systems orbiting dwarf galaxies
A Dartmouth-led study of small galaxies orbited by even smaller star systems could shed light on the universe's formation
2025-08-05
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Treatment for obstructive sleep apnea lowers heart risk for some patients, increases risk for others
2025-08-05
Findings suggest a personalized approach to recommending CPAP machines to patients with obstructive sleep apnea may decrease adverse cardiovascular events.
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), where blockages in the airways cause breathing to uncontrollably stop and start during sleep, is a common sleep-related breathing disorder. Continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) machines can reduce interrupted sleep for patients with OSA. While CPAP improves symptoms, it has been unclear whether CPAP also reduces the risk of heart disease. A new study by ...
Extinction in Macaronesia
2025-08-05
Because their relative isolation encourages speciation, oceanic islands are hotspots of biodiversity. Yet their relatively small size, atypically defenseless animals and plants, and ecological vulnerability to the effects of introduced species has also made them hotspots of extinction. Jairo Patiño, José María Fernández-Palacios and colleagues chronicle every known terrestrial extinction in Macaronesia—an area in the Atlantic Ocean comprising the volcanic archipelagos of the Azores, Madeira, Selvagens, the Canaries, and Cabo Verde. The survey uncovered 220 extinctions representing 3.1% of the Macaronesian endemic species, of which ...
Yonsei University researchers develop deep learning model for microsatellite instability-high tumor prediction
2025-08-05
One in every three people is expected to have cancer in their lifetime, making it a major health concern for mankind. A crucial indicator of the outcome of cancer is its tumor microsatellite status—whether it is stable or unstable. It refers to how stable the DNA is in tumors with respect to the number of mutations within microsatellites. The tumor microsatellite status has important clinical value because patients with microsatellite instability-high (MSI-H) cancers usually have more promising outcomes compared to patients with microsatellite stable tumors. Furthermore, tumors deficient in mismatch repair proteins—these ...
Machine learning-based design enables more efficient wireless power transfer
2025-08-05
Wireless power transfer (WPT) systems transmit electrical energy from a power source to a load without physical connectors or wires, using electromagnetic fields. This idea goes as far back as the 1890s, when Nikola Tesla famously experimented with wireless energy transmission. Today, WPT systems are widely used to power smartphones, electric toothbrushes, and wireless sensors for the Internet of Things. A typical WPT system has a transmitter coil connected to a power source. This transmitter converts the supplied power into an electromagnetic field, which is received by a receiver coil that ...
Beyond pesticides: Discovering nature's own pest control with bush basil companion plants
2025-08-05
Agricultural practices to improve the production of food crops have undergone a drastic transformation in recent years. Owing to the chemical-free production process, organically grown food crops are popular among both consumers and farmers. While greener alternatives to fertilizers have been explored, there remains a critical need for sustainable pest management practices to improve food productivity. Moreover, chemical-based pesticides have the potential to negatively impact the environment, biodiversity, and ecosystems.
To address the lack of natural pest ...
An ancient predator’s shift in diet offers clues on surviving climate change
2025-08-05
About 56 million years ago, when Earth experienced a dramatic rise in global temperatures, one meat-eating mammal responded in a surprising way: It started eating more bones.
That’s the conclusion reached by a Rutgers-led team of researchers, whose recent study of fossil teeth from the extinct predator Dissacus praenuntius reveals how animals adapted to a period of extreme climate change known as the Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM). The findings, published in the journal Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, could help scientists predict how today’s wildlife might respond to modern global warming.
“What happened during ...
How can visual artists protect their work from AI crawlers? It’s complicated
2025-08-05
Visual artists want to protect their work from non-consensual use by generative AI tools such as ChatGPT. But most of them do not have the technical know-how or control over the tools needed to do so.
One of the best ways to protect artists’ creative work is to prevent it from ever being seen by “AI crawlers” – the programs that harvest data on the Internet for training generative models. But most artists don’t have access to the tools that would allow them to take such actions. And when they do have access, they don’t ...
Progress toward a population screening test for COPD
2025-08-05
The possibility of having a tool that facilitates population screening for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) is getting closer. A multicenter study involving leading hospitals across Spain, led by Hospital del Mar and its research institute, has confirmed that people with COPD show altered levels of specific metabolites in their blood. This finding may make it possible to use these biomarkers to identify, at an early stage, those likely to have COPD. The study, conducted with researchers from the CIBER Respiratory ...
University of Bath leads world’s largest growth and maturation study in elite football to support early and late developers
2025-08-05
The University of Bath, in partnership with the University of Edinburgh, has conducted the most extensive growth and maturation study in world football, helping reshape talent development pathways for young players in Scotland.
Commissioned by the Scottish Football Association (SFA) and completed between January and April 2024, the research, published in the Journal of Sports Sciences, evaluated over 1,000 academy players in the Club Academy Scotland (CAS) system - making it the largest study of its kind examining both relative age and biological maturation.
Researchers recorded players’ birth dates, current height and weight, and parental height to project growth and ...
New technique uses focused sound waves and holograms to control brain circuits
2025-08-05
A new study provides the first visual evidence showing that brain circuits in living animals can be activated by ultrasound waves projected into specific patterns (holograms).
Led by scientists at NYU Langone Health and at the University of Zurich and ETH Zurich in Switzerland, the study describes a system that combines sources of ultrasound waves and a fiber scope connected to a camera to visualize in study mice brain targets that are directly activated by the sound. This lays the groundwork, the study authors say, for a new way to treat neurological diseases and mental health disorders from outside of the body.
Already, there are applications approved by the Food and Drug ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
JMIR Publications’ Journal of Medical Internet Research invites submissions on Digital Health Strategic Planning
New cancer drug shows exceptional tumor-fighting potential
Spectral shaper provides unprecedented control over 10,000 laser frequency comb lines
Global Virus Network welcomes new centers of excellence across the Americas
Africa acacias ‘go for broke’ to grow, use up water to survive drought
An app, an Apple Watch and AI: UMass Amherst creates a new way for researchers to study sleep health
Sharing positive emotions with a partner is good for health
Ergonomic insect headgear and abdominal buckle with surface stimulators manufactured via multimaterial 3D printing snap-and-secure installation of noninvasive sensory stimulators for cyborg insects
Pharmacological insights into Scleromitrion diffusum (Willd.) against gastric cancer: active components and mechanistic pathways
Advanced imaging strategies based on intelligent micro/nanomotors
How climate-damaging nitrous oxide forms in the ocean
N6-methyladenosine methylation emerges as a key target for treating acute lung injury
Distributor-type membrane reactor for carbon dioxide methanation
Mapping the missing green: An AI framework boosts urban greening in Tokyo
Pharmacists help cancer patients manage high blood sugar more effectively
Babies’ gut bacteria may influence future emotional health
Scientists create new type of semiconductor that holds superconducting promise
Genes associated with obesity shared across ancestries, researchers find
Antidepressants improve core depressive symptoms early on
Superconducting germanium made with industry-compatible methods
Synthetic biology to supercharge photosynthesis in crops
Soil ‘memory’ can help plants respond to drought
Illinois researchers convert food waste into jet fuel, boosting circular economy
Under embargo: We learn physical skills by feeling rewarded, even in the absence of a reward, finds new study
Scientists on ‘urgent’ quest to explain consciousness as AI gathers pace
Drones reveal unexpectedly high emissions from wastewater treatment plants
Dancing alleviated perceived symptoms of depression and helped to understand its root causes
Tricky treats: Why pumpkins accumulate pollutants
Revealing the molecular structures of sugars using galectin-10 protein crystals
World’s leading medical journal details the climate emergency
[Press-News.org] New survey maps hundreds of satellite systems orbiting dwarf galaxiesA Dartmouth-led study of small galaxies orbited by even smaller star systems could shed light on the universe's formation