Grains
of Cosmic Sand
Myriads of stars embedded in the heart of the nearby
galaxy NGC 300 can be singled out like grains of
sand on a beach in this Hubble Space Telescope image.
The Hubble telescope's exquisite resolution enables
it to see the stars as individual points of light,
despite the fact that the galaxy is millions of
light-years away.
NGC 300 is a spiral galaxy similar to our own Milky
Way galaxy. It is a member of a nearby group of
galaxies known as the Sculptor group, named for
the southern constellation where the group can be
found. The distance to NGC 300 is 6.5 million light-years,
making it one of the Milky Way's closer neighbors.
At this distance, only the brightest stars can be
picked out from ground-based images. With a resolution
some ten to twenty times better than ground-based
telescopes, Hubble's Advanced Camera for Surveys
(ACS) resolves many more stars in this galaxy than
can be detected from the ground.
The color composite was made from filtered images
taken in blue, green, and infrared light. Hot, young
blue stars appear in clusters that form in the galaxy's
spiral arms. Ribbons of deep red stars mark the
location of gauzy curtains of dust that partially
hide the light of the stars behind them. Near the
center of the image is the bright and compact nucleus
of the galaxy where even the ACS loses the ability
to separate the densely packed stars.
The individual exposures that were combined to
make this new image were
taken in July and September 2002. These Hubble data
are being used to test a new method for measuring
distances to galaxies and to compare it with the
more traditional methods, such as the period-luminosity
relationship of pulsating stars known as Cepheid
variables. Measuring distances is a perpetual but
important concern for astronomers.
Some of the luminous blue specks in this image,
young and massive stars
called blue supergiants, are among the brightest
stars seen in spiral
galaxies like NGC 300. By combining the stellar
brightness with other
information, such as the stellar temperature, surface
gravity and mass
outflow, astronomers are defining a new technique
to measure distances
to galaxies located millions of light years away.
Image Credit: NASA and The Hubble Heritage Team
(AURA/STScI)
Acknowledgment: F. Bresolin (Institute for Astronomy,
University of Hawaii)
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