Space is mind-bogglingly vast, and it’s practically impossible for our puny brains to comprehend just how huge it really is. Using the Hubble Space Telescope, an international team of astronomers has completed an exhaustive survey of star-forming galaxies in the local Universe. The resulting catalog won’t help you fathom the immensity of the cosmos, but at least you can enjoy the pretty pictures.
Astronomers are obsessed with star formation, and for good reason. Knowing more about the environments in which stars form, and how molecular clouds of interstellar dust and gas congeal to produce bright balls of hot plasma, can help scientists improve their understanding of galaxies, including how they form and evolve over time.
To help in this regard, an international team of astronomers launched the Legacy ExtraGalactic UV Survey, or LEGUS. By leveraging the ability of the Hubble Space Telescope to detect both visible and ultraviolet light, the LEGUS team managed to capture extraordinarily detailed images of the local Universe. Over a one year period, the astronomers used Hubble’s Wide Field Camera 3 and its Advanced Camera for Surveys to capture the finer details of nearby galaxies, including star clusters, spiral arms, and individual stars themselves. And in fact, it’s now considered the most comprehensive ultraviolet-light survey ever done of nearby galaxies.
It’s actually hard to grasp what these astronomers were able to accomplish. The LEGUS team scanned 50 local galaxies ranging from 11 million to 58 million light-years from Earth. By combining new Hubble observations with archived Hubble data, and by overlaying image taken from both visible and ultraviolet light, the researchers attained remarkable observational clarity.
“There has never before been a star cluster and a stellar catalog that included observations in ultraviolet light,” said team leader Daniela Calzetti of the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, in a statement.”Ultraviolet light is a major tracer of the youngest and hottest star populations, which astronomers need to derive the ages of stars and get a complete stellar history.”
Fifty galaxies were selected for the survey out of 500 possible candidates, and they were chosen according to mass, star-formation rate, and an abundance of elements heavier than hydrogen and helium. A particular focus was paid to star-forming spiral regions and dwarf galaxies. Looking at the images, the researchers could discern such features as star clusters and individual stars.
The resulting catalog contains about 8,000 young clusters, with ages ranging from 1 million to roughly 500 million years old. An astounding 30 million stars were cataloged, all of them at least five times more massive than our own Sun. These stars are between 1 million and several billion years old, the youngest of which shine prominently in ultraviolet light.
The new catalog will now provide detailed information for astronomers about young, massive stars and star clusters, and how their environment influences their development.
“By seeing galaxies in very fine detail—the star clusters—while also showing the connection to the larger structures, we are trying to identify the physical parameters underlying this ordering of stellar populations within galaxies,” said Calzetti. “Getting the final link between gas and star formation is key for understanding galaxy evolution.”
The images produced by the LEGUS team are brilliant, and it’s hard to fathom what we’ll see once the James Webb telescope begins its work. The future of astronomy looks exceptionally bright.
And for those of you hoping these pictures are big enough to use as your desktop wallpaper, you’re in luck. Go here to download high-res images.
[Hubble]
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