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from ZmeScience Website
binds 14 galaxies together. Credit: Lyla Jung.
Razor-thin chain of 14 galaxies may be the biggest
spinning
structure yet... In a recently published study (A 15 Mpc rotating Galaxy Filament at redshift z = 0.032), astronomers using South Africa's MeerKAT radio telescope have identified what could be the largest rotating object ever observed in space.
The object itself is a vast strand of the cosmic web, with a thin line of 14 gas-rich galaxies running along it like beads on a string.
The structure lies about 140 million light-years
away and spans tens of millions of light-years.
What are Cosmic Filaments?
walls and voids forming web-like structures across the universe in a 2014 UCLA study. Credit: Andrew Pontzen/Fabio Governato, UCLA
Those bridges are cosmic filaments:
Over time, gravity nudges gas and galaxies along
these lanes toward busy intersections, shaping how galaxies grow.
The researchers describe the inner string as about 5.5 million light-years long and "only" about 117,000 light-years wide - though that's still wider than the Milky Way.
At that scale, "razor-thin" is not an
exaggeration.
That broader map showed the 14-galaxy chain sits inside a far larger cosmic filament traced by hundreds of galaxies and reaching roughly 50 million light-years from end to end.
The skinny chain is not the whole filament; it's a crisp marker sitting inside a much broader structure.
Hydrogen also helps track motion. When a galaxy rotates, hydrogen gas on one side of its disk moves toward us while the other side moves away, shifting the radio signal across the galaxy.
That lets astronomers map how a disk spins, not
just where it sits.
They found a split:
That contrast matches what rotation would
produce, like a slow carousel where one edge approaches and the
other recedes. The study also reports that many of the galaxies' spin directions line up with the filament more strongly than common computer simulations predict.
Put simply,
Their spins appear tied to the strand they live in, hinting that filament environments can shape rotation for longer - or more strongly - than models usually allow.
Why this
matters for Galaxy F1ormation
Co-lead author Madalina Tudorache
described the system as "a fossil record of cosmic flows," meaning
it preserves clues about how motion in the cosmic web can influence
galaxies.
The team expects more rotating filaments to appear as MeerKAT observations deepen and galaxy catalogs expand.
If many more show bulk rotation plus aligned
galaxy spins, astronomers will have a sharper test for how well
simulations capture the way the cosmic web passes motion down to
galaxies.
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