Showing posts with label astronomical photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label astronomical photography. Show all posts

Monday, November 6, 2017

A Beautiful Star Cluster for Dark Times


As many readers switch from Daylight Savings Time to find darker evenings awaiting them, here is a beautiful new image from the Hubble Space Telescope. We see a "globular cluster" with the catalog name M5 -- an ancient collection of stars, with about 100,000 of them visible on this remarkable photo.
The image combines views taken with visible light and infra-red cameras, and highlights some of the younger bluer stars sprinkled among the older yellower stars that make up the majority of the cluster. This grouping is about 25,000 light years away and was born 12-13 billion years ago.
It was about 100 years ago that Harlow Shapley, one of the greatest astronomers of the 20th century, used such bright globular clusters to map the extent and shape of our Milky Way Galaxy and to demonstrate conclusively that the Sun and the Earth were not in its center.
Such a beautiful picture can help remind us that there is a larger perspective out there, and help us put aside thoughts of the crazy things we seem to be doing to each other and to our fragile planet on almost a daily basis. Click on the pictures to see them bigger.  The diagram below shows how the globular clusters, distributed above and below the plane of our Galaxy, help outline its shape and extent.


Friday, August 12, 2016

A Sparkling Cluster of Stars from the Hubble


Here is a beautiful new image from the Hubble Space Telescope, showing a young cluster of stars called Trumpler 14.
Located about 8,000 light years away in the constellation of Carina, this grouping of hot bright stars formed only recently from a great cloud of cosmic raw material, called the Carina Nebula. It is one of the great ideas that we now know about how stars live that the more massive a star, the brighter it shines, and the shorter its life-span will be before it "burns out." Superstars die first, is the general rule.

Because Trumpler 14 formed only about 500,000 years ago (which is a very short time on the cosmic scale), this group still includes a lot of bright superstars, which dominate our image.
Robert Trumpler (1886-1956) was a Berkeley astronomer, who compiled a very useful list of star clusters (places where dozens to thousands of stars are born together.) An annual award at the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, honoring the best PhD thesis in astronomy in North America, is named in his honor.
In our picture, you can see a jewel-like display of bright stars in front of the glowing gas and dust of the nebula. The stars in this cluster are one ten thousandth the age of our Sun. Mere babies, really!

Click on the photo to enlarge it and see it even better.  

Wednesday, April 23, 2014

A Beautiful Pinwheel of a Galaxy

A Beautiful Pinwheel of a Galaxy




Taking a break from all the heavy-duty science news for a minute, I want to share a beautiful recent image with you from the Hubble Space Telescope.  What you see on our photo is a large part of a spiral shaped galaxy (or island) of stars, known by its catalog number M83. It is about 15 million light years away in the  constellation of Hydra, the water snake.  

M83 contains billions upon billions of stars and quite a bit of gas and dust -- the cosmic raw material from which new stars, new planets, and perhaps even new Facebook fans can form.

This remarkably detailed image emphasizes the pinkish-red regions that are glowing clusters (or groups) of young stars, seen on the edges of the galaxy's spiral arms.  Actually, the young (adolescent) stars in these clusters glow so hot, they give off not just the light our eyes can see, but also energetic ultraviolet light.  The left-over gas that still surrounds these new star groups (in a way, the womb that gave birth to them) then is set to glow.   The excited gas -- mostly the cheapest, simplest element in the universe, hydrogen -- glows with a characteristic pinkish red.

Just look at all the pinkish glow!  That is to say, see all the new stars that we can see having been born recently -- at least recently on the cosmic time scale, or somewhere between 1 to 10 million years ago.  Like most of our cities in the spring and summer, there is still lots of construction going on in such galaxies.