< %=imgalt%>
Home / Technology News / 2008 / April 2008 / April 17, 2008
NASA images show stellar birth in galaxys far reaches

Technology News

Hourglass figures not always healthy for women
Having an imperfect body may not be all that bad, says a new article, which claims that imperfections come with substantial benefits for some women. ANI

Sleep terrors may run in the family
A Canadian study of twins suggests that night terrors, which send children into sudden inconsolable screaming, may run in the family. ANI

Swedish scientists make body-swapping a virtual reality
Cognitive neuroscientists at the Swedish medical university Karolinska Institutet (KI) have successfully created the illusion of body swapping by making subjects perceive the bodies of mannequins and other people as their own. ANI

NASA images show stellar birth in galaxys far reaches

A new image from NASAs Galaxy Evolution Explorer has shown new stars being born in the far reaches of a galaxy, in a relatively desolate region of space more than 100,000 light-years from the galaxys bustling center.

Washington, April 17 : A new image from NASA's Galaxy Evolution Explorer has shown new stars being born in the far reaches of a galaxy, in a relatively desolate region of space more than 100,000 light-years from the galaxy's bustling center.

The image, a composite of ultraviolet data from the Galaxy Evolution Explorer and radio data from the National Science Foundation's Very Large Array in New Mexico, shows the Southern Pinwheel galaxy, also known simply as M83.

In the new view, the main spiral, or stellar, disk of M83 looks like a pink and blue pinwheel, while its outer arms appear to flap away from the galaxy like giant red streamers.

It is within these so-called extended galaxy arms that, to the surprise of astronomers, new stars are forming.

According to Frank Bigiel of the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy in Germany, lead investigator of the new Galaxy Evolution Explorer observations, "It is absolutely stunning that we find such an enormous number of young stars up to 140,000 light-years away from the center of M83."

For comparison, the diameter of M83 is only 40,000 light-years across.

The Galaxy Evolution Explorer first spotted some of the "outback" stars in M83's extended arms in 2005. Remote stars were also discovered around other galaxies by the ultraviolet telescope over subsequent years.

This came as a surprise to astronomers because the outlying regions of a galaxy are assumed to be relatively barren and lack high concentrations of the ingredients needed for stars to form.

The newest Galaxy Evolution Explorer observations of M83 (colored blue and green) were taken over a longer period of time and reveal many more young clusters of stars at the farthest reaches of the galaxy.

To better understand how stars could form in such unexpected territory, Bigiel and his colleagues turned to radio observations from the Very Large Array.

When the astronomers combined the radio and Galaxy Evolution Explorer data, they were delighted to see they matched up.

"The degree to which the ultraviolet emission and therefore the distribution of young stars follows the distribution of the atomic hydrogen gas out to the largest distances is absolutely remarkable," said Fabian Walter, also of the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy.

The astronomers speculate that the young stars seen far out in M83 could have formed under conditions resembling those of the early universe, a time when space was not yet enriched with dust and heavier elements.

ANI

December 3, 2008

December 2, 2008

December 1, 2008

November 30, 2008

November 29, 2008

November 28, 2008