A team of astronomers has managed to obtain evidence of a shockwave produced by the collision of two galactic sub-clusters located in the Abell 98 (A98) galaxy cluster more than 1.2 billion years away from our planet.
According to ScienceAlert, Arnab Sarkar, a physicist and astronomer from the University of Kentucky, and his team have discovered “definitive evidence” of a shock edge to the south of A98N, one of the sub-clusters in question.
"With this discovery, we caught two sub-clusters of a galaxy cluster in a crucial early epoch of the merging process, with a strong shock between them, providing a missing link to the formation of the most massive structures in our Universe," Sarkar said.
The astronomers, who presented their findings recently at the 240th meeting of the American Astronomical Society, argue that their discovery is vastly important, as detecting a cluster merger in its early stages is rare, the media outlet notes.
"This result is important because different computer simulations seem to be telling us different things about what we should observe early on in a galaxy cluster merger," Sarkar said. "Here, we have a picture of what this process actually looks like, and that can be used to inform our theoretical models."