Tuesday, September 1, 2009

ESO - European Organisation for Astronomical Research in the Southern Hemisphere | Zoom to the Arches Cluster - Voyage to the heart of the Milky Way

Click to view video on ESO website

In this zoom sequence we start with a view of the central parts of the Milky Way Galaxy and work inwards towards the Arches Cluster, buried deep beyond the dust clouds. At the last stage, we see the transition from visible to near-infrared observations, piercing through the clouds and revealing the stars of the Arches Cluster.

http://chandra.harvard.edu/photo/2001/arches/

Arches Cluster:
Star Factory Near Galactic Center Bathed In High-Energy X-Rays

Credit: X-ray: NASA/CXC/Northwestern/F.Zadeh et al., IR: NASA/HST/NICMOS, Radio: NRAO/VLA/C.Lang

This composite image shows an envelope of 60-million-degree gas around a young cluster of stars, known as the Arches cluster. The Chandra data, shown as the diffuse blue emission in the inset box, overlays a Hubble Space Telescope infrared image of the same region, in which some of the individual stars in the cluster can be seen as point-like sources. Both the X-ray and infrared observations are shown in context of the spectacular filamentary structures that appear in radio wavelengths displayed in red. Radio observations were obtained using the Very Large Array (VLA) of radio telescopes.

The Arches cluster contains about 150 hot, young stars concentrated within a radius of about one light year, making it the most compact cluster of stars in our Galaxy. Many of these stars are 20 times as massive as the Sun and live short, furious lives that last only a few million years. During this period, gas evaporates from these stars in the form of intense stellar winds. The envelope of hot gas observed by Chandra is thought to be due to collisions of the winds from numerous stars.

Studies of the Arches cluster, located about 26,000 light years from Earth, can be used to learn more about the environments of "starburst" galaxies millions of light years away where this phenomenon may be occurring on a much larger scale.



Related:
September 1, 2009 - The Daily Galaxy: Massive Magnetic Fields Observed at Center of the Milky Way ... "The Arches", megascale ribbons of hotplasma flowing around the supermassive black hole at the core of our galaxy. ... these magneticfields channel vast streamers of hot plasma which radiate ..

April 30, 2008 - The Daily galaxy: Massive Magnetic Fields Observed at Center of the Milky Way
... Hidden at the center of our galaxy, Sagittarius A-star is the mass of three million ... Massive Magnetic Fields Observed at the Milky Way Core ... One such ultra-impressive artifact is "The Arches", megascale ribbons of hot plasma flowing around the supermassive black hole at the core of our galaxy. ...