Home Science & Environment Webb telescope gives an surprising view of the Sombrero galaxy

Webb telescope gives an surprising view of the Sombrero galaxy

0


Sign up for CNN’s Wonder Theory science publication. Explore the universe with information on fascinating discoveries, scientific developments and extra.



CNN
 — 

The James Webb Space Telescope has captured a stunning new view of a long-studied galactic neighbor, the Sombrero galaxy, revealing a perspective that appears fairly totally different from the wide-brimmed Mexican hat for which it was named.

Taken with the area observatory’s Mid-Infrared Instrument, or MIRI, the picture showcases the galaxy’s clean internal disk, quite than the glowing core that often shines in seen mild photographs taken with the Hubble Space Telescope. Webb’s view makes the “crown” of the sombrero invisible, altering the looks of the galaxy to resemble a bull’s-eye. Meanwhile, distant galaxies glimmer within the background of the picture.

The galaxy — also called Messier 104, or M104 — is about 30 million light-years from Earth within the Virgo constellation. French astronomer and comet hunter Pierre Méchain found it in 1781. Méchain named the galactic discover for his colleague Charles Messier, who famously cataloged star clusters and nebulae.

Webb’s delicate devices can detect celestial objects by means of various wavelengths of infrared mild, which is invisible to the human eye, to disclose beforehand unseen particulars of the universe.

The high-quality particulars of Messier 104 detected by MIRI additionally showcase the galaxy’s outer ring, revealing how mud — a vital ingredient for celestial objects reminiscent of stars and planets — is structured and distributed all through the galaxy.

Previously, when NASA’s now-retired Spitzer Space Telescope noticed the Sombrero galaxy, the outer ring appeared clean, however Webb’s new imagery reveals the complicated, clumpy nature of the dusty ring, which may counsel the presence of a stellar nursery.

Hubble: Messier 104, The Sombrero Galaxy Looking like a broad-brimmed Mexican hat, the “Sombrero” galaxy, M104, is a spiral galaxy seen nearly edge-on.

The Sombrero Galaxy is imaged in seen mild by the Hubble Space Telescope, left, and in mid-infrared mild by the James Webb Space Telescope’s MIRI (Mid-Infrared Instrument).
NASA/ESA/CSA/Hubble Heritage Team/STScI/AURA

Webb’s new detections additionally enabled astronomers to identify carbon-containing molecules, reminiscent of polycyclic fragrant hydrocarbons, within the mud ring, which additional means that the galaxy’s outer ring could also be dwelling to star-forming areas. But the Sombrero galaxy is quiet when it comes to star formation in contrast with different galaxies reminiscent of Messier 82. Ten occasions as many stars are born within the latter galaxy than the estimated 100 billion stars that exist within the Milky Way.

Scientists estimate that the rings of the Sombrero galaxy produce lower than one photo voltaic mass of stars every year, with one photo voltaic mass equaling the mass of our solar. In distinction, the Milky Way is answerable for creating about two photo voltaic plenty a yr, in keeping with NASA.

The supermassive black gap on the heart of the Sombrero galaxy can be much less lively than these on the heart of different galaxies, slowly consuming materials from Messier 104 and releasing a shiny however small jet of radiation.

But the galaxy is filled with 2,000 globular clusters, or teams of lots of of hundreds of outdated stars gravitationally held collectively, offering the right place for astronomers to conduct comparability research of stars which are the identical age however differ in mass and different features.

The Webb telescope, launched in December 2021, will start its fourth yr of observing the universe in July. Scientists throughout the globe have utilized for commentary time with the telescope to seek for exoplanets and their atmospheres, stars and distant galaxies.

Exit mobile version