GeminiFocus December 2012 | Page 26

Figure 2. Microwave (orange), optical (red, green, blue), and ultraviolet (blue) image of the Phoenix Cluster. Image courtesy of the Chandra X-ray Observatory. surements are essential to the study of the expansion history of the universe and hence to constrain the nature of dark energy. The supernovae used in the study, discovered with the Palomar Transient Factory, were confirmed as ordinary Type Ia supernovae by subsequent spectroscopy and by using the Near-Infrared Imager and Spectrometer (NIRI) on the Gemini North telescope to follow the characteristic fading of the NIR emission and determine the peak brightness. One further important selection criterion was to restrict the study to supernovae at distances large enough so the overall expansion of the universe (the Hubble flow) determines the motion of their host galaxies, independent of local peculiar motions; i.e., redshifts 0.03 < z < 0.09 (Figure 1). While earlier work had already indicated the greater uniformity of supernova emission in the NIR, this is the first large study to obtain highquality measurements of more distant supernovae. Although these observations are more difficult because the distant supernovae appear fainter, this avoids the complication of local motions and results in the most precise known standard candle for cosmological measurements. Beginning to Solve the Cooling Flow Problem Clusters of galaxies are full of hot gas that emits copious X-ray radiation. This emission should lead to a “cooling flow,” whereby cooling material sinks to the dense center of the cluster. In turn, we expect this inflowing reservoir of relatively cool gas to stimulate star formation in the galaxy located at the cluster’s core, rather than result in runaway cooling of the cluster gas. The problem, until now, is that observations of such central galaxies have revealed them to be quiescent, showing little evidence for ongoing star formation. 26 GeminiFocus Michael McDonald (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) and colleagues have now detected the first evidence for significant cooling-flow-induced star formation in a central cluster galaxy (McDonald et al., Nature, 488: 349, 2012). The cluster itself, designated SPT-CLJ2344-4243, was detected with the South Pole Telescope. Follow-up spectra obtained using the Gemini MultiObject Spectrograph (GMOS) at Gemini South provided some of the first hints that the central galaxy was unlike the red, wellformed elliptical galaxies typical of cluster cores. The researchers also used additional measurements of other cluster members to determine the baseline redshift (z = 0.6) for comparison of other observations. The more complete analysis of the so-called “Phoenix Cluster” and its central galaxy (Figure 2) emerges from observations spanning X-ray to far-infrared energies. The central galaxy possesses an active nucleus in addition to star formation at a rate of 740 MSun/ year. The star formation rate is still too low to prevent runaway cooling, given the measured cooling flow rate of 3800 MSun/year, suggesting that the feedback mechanism is not fully established in this example. Nonetheless, the high star formation rate points to this mode of star formation from intracluster gas as an important element December2012