Super-Windstorms Can Strip Galaxies of Star Stuff

An artist’s impression showing a galaxy with a molecular outflow. The detection of outflows powerful enough to strip galaxies of their molecular gas reservoir represents solid evidence in support of the merger-driven scenario for the formation of elliptic
An artist’s impression showing a galaxy with a molecular outflow. The detection of outflows powerful enough to strip galaxies of their molecular gas reservoir represents solid evidence in support of the merger-driven scenario for the formation of elliptical galaxies.
(Image credit: ESA/AOES Medialab)

Winds 10,000 times faster than an Earth hurricane’s have been seen streaming molecular gas – the raw material needed to make new stars – away from galaxies. These raging galactic windstorms may have the power to strip galaxies of gas and halt star formation altogether, European Space Agency researchers say.

The ESA’s Herschel infrared space observatory detected these extraordinary winds, the first time such molecular gas outflows have been observed in a sample of galaxies. The fastest is blowing at a speed of more than 620 miles (1,000 kilometers) per second. [Video: Galactic Storm Destroyer of Galaxies]

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