WHAT'S HOT:
'Incredible' image reveals over one billion stars in Milky Way
Mar 29, 11:26 am
Washington, Mar 29 (ANI): More than a billion stars in our galaxy can be seen together in detail for the first time in an image captured by astronomers.Scientists created the colour picture by combining infra-red light images from telescopes in the northern and southern hemispheres. Large structures of the Milky Way galaxy, such as gas and dust clouds where stars have formed and died, can be seen in the image.The picture represents part of a 10-year project involving scientists from the UK, Europe and Chile, who gathered data from the two telescopes. The information has been processed and archived by teams at the Universities of Edinburgh and Cambridge, who have made it available to astronomers around the world for further studies.Archived information from the project - known as the VISTA Data Flow System - is expected to enable scientists to carry out groundbreaking research in future years without the need to generate further data.The image shows the plane of the Milky Way galaxy, which is often described as looking like two fried eggs back-to-back, with a flat disc in the middle. Earth is close to the edge of this disc, and the image shows a cross-section through the disc as seen from Earth's perspective.It combines data from the UKIDSS/GPS sky survey taken by the UK Infrared Telescope in Hawaii with the VVV survey from the VISTA telescope in Chile.Astronomers used infra-red radiation instead of visible light to enable them to see through much of the dust in the
Milky Way and record details of the centre of the galaxy.Scientists have published the image online with an interactive zoom tool that reveals the detail within. Zooming into the image reveals a tiny fraction of the entire picture, which alone contains more than 10,000 stars."This incredible image
gives us a new perspective of our galaxy, and illustrates the far-reaching discoveries we can make from large sky surveys," Dr Nick Cross, of the University of Edinburgh's School of Physics and Astronomy, said. "Having data processed, archived and published by dedicated teams leaves other scientists free to concentrate on using the data, and is a very cost-effective way to do astronomy," Dr Cross added. (ANI)
Climate change after cosmic impact may have wiped out wooly mammoths
May 21, 11:45 am
Washington, May 21 (ANI): A new research has found evidence of a major cosmic event near the end of the Ice Age, which resulted in a climate change that forced many species, including wooly mammoths, to die.
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Venus, Jupiter and Mercury will dance in spring twilight
May 21, 11:07 am
Washington, May 21 (ANI): Three planets - Venus, Jupiter, and Mercury will present a spectacular sky show during the last week of May.
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Mice and lizard return after a month in space
May 20, 11:34 am
Washington, May 20 (ANI): A Russian capsule, which had mice and lizards as its occupants, returned to Earth on Sunday after spending a month in space.
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Asteroid 9 times larger than Queen Elizabeth 2 ship to sail past Earth on May 31
May 19, 3:57 pm
Washington, May 19 (ANI): Asteroid 1998 QE2 will sail past Earth on May 31, getting no closer than about 3.6 million miles (5.8 million kilometers), or about 15 times the distance between Earth and the moon.
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