HUBBLE TELESCOPE REVEALS SWARM OF GLITTERING STARS IN NEARBY GALAXY
NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has
peered at a small area within the Large Magellanic
Cloud (LMC) to provide the deepest color picture
ever obtained in that satellite galaxy of our own
Milky Way.
Over 10,000 stars can be seen in the
photo, covering a region in the LMC about 130 light-years
wide. The faintest stars in the picture are some
100 million times dimmer than the human eye's limit
of visibility. Our Sun, if located in the LMC, would
be one of the faintest stars in the photograph,
indistinguishable from the swarm of other similar
stars.
Also visible in the image are sheets
of glowing gas, and dark patches of interstellar
dust silhouetted against the stars and gas behind
them.
The LMC is a small companion galaxy
of our own Milky Way, visible only from Earth's
southern hemisphere. It is named after Ferdinand
Magellan, one of the first Europeans to explore
the world's southern regions. The LMC attracts the
attention of modern-day astronomers because, at
a distance of only 168,000 light-years, it is one
of the nearest galaxies.
The Wide Field Planetary Camera 2
(WFPC2) image was taken in 1996 in Hubble's "parallel"
mode while another of the telescope's instruments,
the Faint Object Spectrograph, was taking long exposures
of the LMC's Tarantula Nebula. The Tarantula, lying
outside the field of view of the WFPC2 photograph,
is a tremendous cloud of gas, within which new stars
are forming.
NASA astronomers Sally Heap, Eliot
Malumuth, and Philip Plait, who work at the Goddard
Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, pointed
Hubble's spectrograph at the core of the Tarantula
to investigate its young stars. They also switched
on WFPC2 at the same time, in order to obtain the
image presented here.
The Hubble Heritage Team later combined
the WFPC2 images, taken through different color
filters, in order to create the color picture shown
here. The range of star colors visible in the WFPC2
image reveals the variety of stellar surface temperatures.
Hot stars, with temperatures of 10,000 degrees Celsius
and above, have a bluish-white color; stars cooler
than our Sun's 6,000 degrees Celsius are reddish.
Credit: NASA and The Hubble
Heritage Team (STScI/AURA)
Acknowledgment: S. Heap, E. Malumuth and P. Plait
(Goddard Space Flight Center) |