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Quantum fluctuations in space, science, exploration and other cosmic fields... served up regularly by MSNBC.com science editor Alan Boyle since 2002.

Alan Boyle covers the physical sciences, anthropology, technological innovation and space science and exploration for MSNBC.com. He is a winner of the AAAS Science Journalism Award, the NASW Science-in-Society Award and other honors; a contributor to "A Field Guide for Science Writers"; and a member of the board of the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing.

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Galaxy revealed in high-res

Posted: Tuesday, May 29, 2007 4:55 PM by Alan Boyle


NASA / ESA / STScI / AURA
The galaxy M81 looks much like our own Milky Way galaxy would from afar.

The Hubble Space Telescope has sent back the best view yet of a picture-perfect galaxy known as M81 or Bode's Galaxy, resolving single points of starlight as well as star clusters and glowing regions of fluorescent gas.

"The amazing detail in this image took our breath away," Andreas Zezas, an astronomer at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, said in a news release unveiling the image. "We can see individual stars like tiny grains of sand."

M81, which lies 11.6 million light-years away in the northern constellation Ursa Major, is a popular target for astronomers and amateur stargazers. It can be seen in clear, dark skies with binoculars or a small telescope.(Check out the star chart on this Web page to find it.) Over the years, many space telescopes have taken turns looking at M81, ranging from the Astro-1 ultraviolet imager and Japan's Akari sky-surveying satellite to NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope and Galaxy Evolution Explorer.

But Hubble's image, presented Monday at the American Astronomical Society's spring meeting in Honolulu, is in a class of its own. It took the equivalent of two and a half days of observing time - parceled out over two years - for Hubble's Advanced Camera for Surveys to collect the visible-light and infrared data that went into this picture.

Although the view is aesthetically stunning, there's also a higher scientific purpose behind the picture: Like our own Milky Way, M81 is a "grand design" galaxy, noted for its symmetrical, cyclonic shape. Only about 10 percent of the galaxies we see fit this category. What's more, M81 is in the midst of a surge in star formation, perhaps sparked hundreds of millions of years ago by a close encounter with M82, an irregular-shaped starburst galaxy nearby.

In an e-mail, Zezas told me that an up-close and personal look at M81 could tell astronomers a lot about how galaxies are put together:

"The goal of the project is to map the star-formation history of this galaxy. By this I mean, [to] learn when and where the different populations of stars were formed. Studies of this type on spiral galaxies are difficult because they require large amounts of observing time, and they usually tend to focus on individual regions. The advantage of these data is that we map with the maximum detail possible the whole galaxy so we can study individual stars over the whole of M81.

"We know from previous studies that M81 had  periods of enhanced star-formation in the past few hundred million years. The new data will show which regions of the galaxy were more active and will reveal new episodes of star formation.

"This work will tell us how spiral galaxies form and how galaxy interactions affect their stellar populations (M81 is in a group of interacting galaxies, which is the nearest analog of our own local group).

"Also, by comparing with observations in the X-ray band with the Chandra X-ray Observatory, we will study the populations of black holes and neutron stars, which will give us more information on stellar evolution and its endpoints. This in turn will help us to better understand the X-ray emission from more distant galaxies."

In the Hubble image, Zezas and his colleagues could track streams of bluish hot stars that formed in the past few million years, as well as somewhat older stars from an earlier episode of star formation. Lanes of dust wind their way down to M81's center. "The presence of dust lanes shows that star formation is happening all the way down to the nucleus," Zezas said.

Like our Milky Way, M81's nucleus appears to be anchored by a supermassive black hole - although at the equivalent of 70 million solar masses, M81's black hole is about 15 times as massive as the Milky Way's.


NASA / ESA / CfA / JPL-Caltech
This image of M81 combines data from
the Hubble Space Telescope, the Spitzer
Space Telescope and the Galaxy
Evolution Explorer missions.

The Hubble project is part of a larger investigation of M81 that also draws upon the data from Spitzer and the Galaxy Evolution Explorer. In fact, the most sparkling view of M81 is an image that combines the data from all three space telescopes.

"It's absolutely amazing to be able to study star formation in this galaxy with three superb space telescopes in ways we could never achieve from the ground," said John Huchra, another astronomer at the Center for Astrophysics who is working with Zezas on the survey.

The bottom line is that by studying a galaxy far, far away, we get a better understanding of galaxies like our own. In a way, M81 is holding up a mirror to our own celestial face.

"The view we have of M81 is similar to what an astronomer in Andromeda would see if they looked at the Milky Way," Zezas explained.

For closer looks at the mirror, including zoomable images and videos, check out the Space Telescope Science Institute's Hubblesite as well as the European Space Agency's Hubble Information Center. And for a cornucopia of celestial pictures, visit our own Space Gallery.

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Comments

Zoom in to the lower right corner of the image. What is that? Is it a supernova or a black hole with a single jet stream?
WOW!!!
WOW! Is right. Amazing isn't it.
To think that we are alone is ludicrous.  So many stars and so little info on other earthlike planets.  Gotta raise some eyebrows.
wow!! this page is cool and amazing they found another new galaxy! (again)
It is stunning. To me it looks like either a superposition of two galaxies, or a collision. The upper object looks a bit too regular to be involved in a collision, but without velocity data it is hard to say. The lower one looks like an edge-on spiral, like an Sc.
I wonder if there are any hot chicks on that planet?
And to actually believe that we are alone; how selfish of us.
Wonderful pictures, thank you for sharing them. Hubble is truly one big success for NASA and our scientists. Hopefully it will be saved for many more years.
What if we ARE alone? Probability isn't a living force that emerges from nothingness. To say that there are so many stars and planets out there that one of them MUST contain life like ours, basing the statement on nothing more, is like saying that of all the grains of sand on all the beaches in the whole World, surely one of them MUST speak French.

Compared to what you're viewing here, your entire mentality is infinitesimal, and your whole lifetime is zip. The visible perspective of M81 from Earth hasn't even changed since history began. You'll be dust and long gone and forgotten by the time anyone ever does more than merely peer through a telescope at this. Your thoughts have no weight whatsoever. Enjoy the spectacle, because that's all there will ever be, for you.
Beautiful!
And to think that every star in that picture could have planets revolving around it. The Universe is larger than the mind can grasp.
If each star in the galaxy is like a grain of sand, as astronomer Zezas states in the article, then the planets must be practically invisible. Should make an earthling feel pretty humble.
You can not look at this and say there is no God.
100 billion stars in each galaxy, and a 100 billion galaxies. What if the original purpose for man was to terraform the earth, and then the universe? There has to be a God!
11.6 million light-years away, wonder what it really looks like now? Maybe, just maybe, something is living out there.

Holy sh*t! Now that's detail.
And alas, the mind's eye screams in horror & ecstasy as it views a room a thousand years wide.
Mark from MO, You are obviously an optimist..............
I've been there. No Big deal.
They should have named it the "Humble Space Telescope"
Whoa! Let me just say I downloaded the full res .jpeg (who needs a 700mb .tiff anyway?) and my computer got p*ssed at me! I opened it in windows picture viewer and kept zooming in until it couldn't zoom any more - each time maxxed out my CPU for about 30sec - then decided to hit the "actual size" button. And windows gave me the middle finger ("drawing failed").

Also, Mark from MO, wow that was harsh. I don't think anyone here really expects to make contact with anything living in this galaxy in any timeframe resembling their lifespan. But honestly, look out your window. See those trees? Grass? Birds? Do you honestly believe this is the only tiny place in all the seemingly infinite universe that anything remotely like that happens? Pretty arrogant thing to think if you ask me.
I do, in fact, feel humbled by this, to think that the light we are seeing from it started ~11.6 million years ago, and has traveled all this way, it really makes one feel infinitesimal in the grand scheme of things.

I know we will never be able to see it up close, at least not in my lifetime, but to know it's there, and to think they could be there, looking at us, thinking the same things we are.  It's absolutely amazing.
After viewing this, many feel the need to cry out indignantly "To think we are alone is absurd!". Yet most people I know already assume we are not alone. My guess is that over 70% of population already believes in ET. So why the indignation?
It never ends...
WOW! I WISH I HAD THE MONEY TO GO BACK TO SCHOOL AND GET INTO THIS FIELD. IT IS AMAZING.
Isn't Lindsey Lohan from this galaxy?
After viewing this picture, to say and think that there is no other life out there, that we are alone, is truly man's own arrogance.
It is amazing what God can do is it not.
i wonder how many hours Hubble spent to take the picture of this resolution?. Space is an inspiration for all human kind who is fighting with themself for trivial religious beliefs.

We need bigger and better telescope. Why not put another space telescope far from earth so the moon and sun light won't interfere?.
".. and the heavens declare His GLORY."
Mark--Really enjoyed YOUR comparison and views on probability of life--YOUR understanding of the Laws of Physics and Calculus would serve me well in a game of chance, such as Poker--YOUR usage of the terms 'YOU','YOUR',and 'YOU'RE' in YOUR post seethed of arrogance and self-importance--A supreme intellect--If mankind were to accept YOUR ideas, WE would be living in caves and writing on animal skins while we worshipped the gods of our ancestors--WE may well be the center of our universe, but then we would be only that 'grain of sand which spoke French'--
So I was speaking in french to this grain of sand the other day...Mark, you take yourself way too seriously...Where's the first train outta this planet!!!  Thank God, and whomever else cares that there are actually people left on this world that care to build and reach for the stars (and deep oceans!)...Thank You for your passion and pioneering effort for the sake of humanity.
Whats so stunning about these pictures of M81, M82 andromeda and the like is that it makes our issues on this grain of sand we live on so insignificant it makes the answers to our problems here simple. If we would just see ourselves for we we really are everything could be great on earth. We are nothing in the grand scheme of things.
Man, that is really beautiful. HE certainly is wiser than we are. I have enjoyed reading all of the different viewpoints, even the non-christians. No big deal. Everyone will be judged by HE who is higher than anyone on this planet, and anywhere else in the universe for that matter. GO HUBBLE!!
An AMAZING picture which in no way makes me believe in god.
We look up and see the Milky Way stretching from horizon to horizon above us.  Imagine Earth circling one of those stars, and then look up and see creation happening  before our eyes, filling our minds with glory.  

Life, our life, is a matter of natural consequence, a part of universal existence.  But we can still be alone, and destined to fill that universe with ourselves.  I see my sons and daughters in extension to the farthest suns...
That's not so killer. I see stars exactly like that every time I BUMP MY HEAD!
Some of the religious comments crack me up. These pictures are proof that there are other galaxies. That does not mean this is proof that an existential being (what you call God) exists. Wake up and smell the coffee.
dont insert religious BS.....please....
We are not alone.
Actually, the Milky Way is now thought to be a barred spiral. See http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap050825.html
The Hubble! What an awesome machine! Just another stunning photo! Thanks to all those responsible for this wonderful shot of the Bode's Galaxy. Nice job.
It is an incredible picture, very humbling indeed.

Although, I dont see the 'made by god' sign. It figures that some people always will see what is not there.
alex....a better and bigger space telescope is being built as we read these blogs...it will be sent out much farther than the earth-moon distance, about 1 million miles from earth. as i understand, we are talking about 2012 or so to have it operational. it will make this photo look like it was made with a prize from a cracker jack box.....and paul, well said!
Are we alone? Yes and No. All of the comments re M81/hubble high res photo are relevant. (I wouldn't want to speculate on the "great chicks possibility" comment but consider this cosmic philosophers and scientists: Is this a high resolution image of M81 or is it actually a high resolution image of The Milkey Way Galaxy (at another point in time--say a few billion years ago)? (Hint: To determine whether this harebrained theory is actually correct or not, make a three dimensional model of the photo in virtual reality and find the point in the M81 galaxy model, where from this point, our constellations (as they appeared to Earth a few billion years ago), are visable in M81, as they were to Us a few billion years ago, here(If we were around to view them then). A method of thinking called "antilogic" would suggest that this theory (M81 is The Milkey Way) is actually true.I respectfully invite all of you to chew on this. Bon appetit! (How do you spell "appetit"??)
This picture reminds me of a poem with some of the words as follows: "...this world's a room so small within the Master's house, the open sky but a portion of His yard..."
Physics is our god.
In relative terms, our solar system must be the size of an amoeba magnified under a microscope. It's hard to fathom that all the known laws of physics describe why and how such collosal structures exist. Recently however, it has been shown that galaxies don't actually conform exactly to Newton's law of Gravitation. There seems to be something else at play.
In relative terms, our solar system must be the size of an amoeba magnified under a microscope. It's hard to fathom that all the known laws of physics describe why and how such collosal structures exist. Recently however, it has been shown that galaxies don't actually conform exactly to Newton's law of Gravitation. There seems to be something else at play.


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