Mysterious space object is full of dark matter

An international team of astronomers has discovered a new class of cosmic entity while harnessing the Hubble Space Telescope. Detailed in a recent study published in The Astrophysical Journal Letters, the find marks the first confirmed example of a long-theorized, but never proven formation known as a Reionization-Limited H I Cloud, or RELHIC. But while the gigantic region nicknamed Cloud-9 may be starless, it contains some of the universeâs most elusive content: dark matter.
âThis cloud is a window into the dark Universe,â study co-author and Space Telescope Science Institute (STCScl) team member Andrew Fox said in a statement. âWe know from theory that most of the mass in the Universe is expected to be dark matter, but itâs difficult to detect this dark material because it doesnât emit light. Cloud-9 gives us a rare look at a dark-matter-dominated cloud.â
Located approximately 2,000 light-years from Earth, Cloud-9 is much smaller, symmetrical, and compact compared to the typical hydrogen clouds that neighbor the Milky Way galaxy. Initial calculations indicate the pressure of Cloud-9âs gas also balances the dark matter cloudâs gravity, implying it features much more of the latter. Currently, astronomers estimate it includes around 5 billion solar masses of dark matter.
According to Alejandro Benitez-Llambay, a program lead investigator and astronomer at Italyâs Milano-Bicocca University, Cloud-9 is the first-known RELHIC and a âtale of a failed galaxy.â
âIn science, we usually learn more from the failures than from the successes,â he explained. âIn this case, seeing no stars is what proves the theory right. It tells us that we have found in the local Universe a primordial building block of a galaxy that hasnât formed.â
Two letters in RELHIC are key to understanding its significanceâH and I. It stands for neutral hydrogen, the elemental gas from the universeâs earliest eras that never contributed to the birth of stars. Cloud-9âs core of neutral hydrogen is roughly 4,900 light-years wide and contains around 1 million times the mass of our sun.Â
For years, astronomers suspected that RELHICs lurked somewhere in the depths of space, but pinpointing them is a major challenge. Whatâs more, a suspected RELHIC could be overlooked without access to some of astronomyâs most powerful tools. In this case, the first clues about Cloud-9âs identity arrived in 2023, but it needed the Hubble Space Telescopeâs Advanced Camera for Surveys to confirm its cosmic nature.
âBefore we used Hubble, you could argue that this is a faint dwarf galaxy that we could not see with ground-based telescopes,â STScl astronomer and study co-author Gagandeep Anand explained. âThey just didnât go deep enough in sensitivity to uncover stars. But with HubbleâŚweâre able to nail down that thereâs nothing there.â
However, Cloud-9 may not always remain a failed galaxy. Depending on its growth rate, the REHLIC may one day become massive enough to collapse and form the first stars in a new galactic neighborhood. At the same time, powerful cosmic forces may also strip away gas as Cloud-9 travels through space. Either way, astronomers now have their first REHLIC to studyâand it likely wonât be their last.
âAmong our galactic neighbors, there might be a few abandoned houses out there,â added study co-author and STScl astronomer Rachael Beaton.




