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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

I've looked at M81 thru my telescope in my driveway but this picture is awesome. Remember the universe is 13.7 billion years old. The light from some of the objects originated when the dinosaurs were roaming out planet or older is amazing. Astronomy is very humbling hobby for me. When you are talking about distance measured in light years is amazing. Light travels at 186k miles/sec will give you an idea the vastness of the universe!

"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."

[...] Poor Mark can't quite manage to find like things to compare. If he had that first French-speaking grain of sand, then maybe he could reasonably expect to find another, simply playing the odds. But unless you have that first Francophile grain of sand, there's not necessarily any reason to expect to find one.

We have the first world with life. Laying down your money the existence of another (whether or not the life is like that on Earth) is simply a smart bet considering the odds.

What's really amazing is scrolling around the high res picture seeing hundreds of other galaxies in the background of all shapes and sizes - "worlds without end". Whether you believe in a Creator or not we can all agree the Universe is truly astounding. We're a blip on the cosmic radar screen, but we are an intelligent blip able to wonder and marvel at the mysteries of life.
God is so creative....spectacular pics.
In a time that we are all in a hurry, this is breath taking and shows just how small we are in a large universe.
This is absolutely beautiful. I would not be surprised to find life on one of the planets.
how many tax dollars were spent on this? is this where bush think's al-qaeda's hq is? but an awesome visual image nonetheless.
wow this is quite intriguing
Yes yes, very interesting. You know the moon is made of cheese. Why isnt anyone discussing that?
Stopped reading after the comment about grains of sand speaking French. I know of at least one planet that has people. I don't know of any grains of sand that speak french. I think it is far more likely to find life on another planet than to find a grain of sand that speaks french...don't you? My apologies if I repeated something someone said after that reply.
Класс!
Way to go NASA, When does the next shuttle leave for this galaxy?
I'd like to tell Bryan that i certainly can look at this photo and say.."there is no god"....why would anyone see a supernatural diety lurking in the universe when looking at this fine photograph....if man finds god anywhere it is in the dark regions of his own mind.
Images like this inspire, give hope, raise questions and stoke curiosities. How wonderful to live in a time that speaks loudly of possibilities and dares me to dream. I may not live long enough to see humans travel to such stars-but there is NOTHING to stop me from imagining it. Keep reaching, keep dreaming: to hope is to live!!
well i think it's ok
wow!!!!!!!!!!cool
I wish I could go out to every single system and explore them; see what life out there looks like and how it differs from us. "Wah!" I wanna go Now!
I know that scientist and machine engineers are uncovering the mysteries on how God created the Universe. It is such a great pleasure to see such beauty! The hubble telescope is going where no Man, Woman or the world has gone before. Bravo!!!!!! I think M81 and other galaxies are like one big world and moving and devouring and colliding together to become one huge magnificence super world!!!:)
Although interesting, this type of research does nothing for ourselves. We need to keep better care of our people. Look at all the violence confronting us. The planet earth will survive well beyond the phase of human beings.
Hey this picture is just divine. NASA has done a great job here. Hubble Space Telescope should stay in orbit forever because it will really help humans to explore a minute section of the universe. Can help when aliens are invading!!
Words are inadequate when I see such pictures of our universe. I feel so small, but a part of something great. Only the LORD could think this one up.
wow
I love Space, I was gazing up at the moon last night it was full and really big not a cloud in the sky. I often browse the internet for pictures of galaxies and stars planets and such. I love it! Keep them coming!
I wonder if they have internet.
AND IN THE CENTER IS A SUPER MASIVE BLACKHOLE
Only the fool in his heart says there is no God.  My word, stop and think about this.  This is what God has planned for us!  To spend eternity exploring!  Mark from Mo you sound dejected!  Do not be!  You will see this and much more (has not entered into the heart of man what God has prepared for those who believe in him)if you are born again!  

How can man be so arrogant as to believe that we (thinking, emotional, intricate and very complex human beings who are able to reason and think and build and go to the moon, visit planets with unbelievable technology) are an accident of evolution?  IMPOSSIBLE! We are not accidents.  God created us!

Wake up!   This is a glimpse that God has allowed us to see in our future!  God allowed men to see this.  Without God you cannot take your next breath.  It's truly beautiful and the beauty is only beginning.
How can anyone think that we are really the only intellegent lifeforms in this massive galaxy of ours?also, Why is there air?
MY God is an awesome God!!
Mark, A cheery thought, however... As little as our small minds comprehend is the smallness of possibilities. I wouldn't be so arrogant as to assume either way. Yet, think of it, the delicate and imperfect species that we are, how much more possible it is for the existence of creatures more evolved. Tell me, Mark, what do you think the deep-sea world has to say about the possibility of us?
If space is such a magnificient place, I will not spare my life to observe it.
MY God is an awesome God! We live by Faith!
It is better to believe in GOD and DIE to find out there isn't a GOD, Than to not believe in GOD and DIE to find out there is a GOD. Great Picture!
The images are absolutely amazing! How incredibly beautiful! For the Believers out there, "He telleth the number of the stars; he calleth them all by their names."
this is truly amazing it makes me whant to cry never have i been so amazed
Esto es fantastico, increible lo que podemos lograr con estos telescopios.
Probability of a grain of sand speaking French? Based on what we presently know, infinitesimal. But, if you happened to find ONE grain of sand that spoke French, I'd say that the odds that there is another one out there on some beach is likely much greater.
god no god how about we acpet the reality that we are simply like our early ancestors speculating that what comprises the physics to be no more ignorant than early days where the earth was the center of our universe.

1 black holes only exist in theory

2 a picture can be interpreted in many ways.

3 our math and physic have only reach a level which has only granted us the ability to destory ourselves. Not reach beyond to answer greater questions that exist.

I am so tired of mit / cal state grads telling us what the universe is. The universe is a giant enigma that our lives will never have answers to and hopefully if we survive ourselves future generations will answer. Thanx for the great picture.

Badgasman9~  
The most merciful thing in the world, I think, is the inability of the human mind to correlate all its contents. We live on a placid island of ignorance in the midst of black seas of infinity, and it was not meant that we should voyage far. The sciences, each straining in its own direction, have hitherto harmed us little; but some day the piecing together of dissociated knowledge will open up such terrifying vistas of reality, and of our frightful position therein, that we shall either go mad from the revelation or flee from the light into the peace and safety of a new dark age. H.P. Lovecraft
"You're looking into God's jewel box," as someone else once said.
The Word of Almighty One in more details! WOW!
I'VE ALWAYS WONDER HOW CAN THEY INVENT SOMETHING TO SEE SO FAR FAR AWAY AND YET NOT BEEN ABLE TO SEE THE DEEPEST VERY BOTTON OF THE SEA
maybe we are the aliens....such an awsome sight
Has anyone else noticed that no women replied?
And to think, God created all of this and yet He loves us.
I think this photo is beautiful, It doesn't make me believe in God - I ALREADY DO!!! It amazes me how insulting some people can be. Christians are not trying to make you believe anything. Forums are to write your opinion. No reason to insult anyone.
You don't need a telescope to know there's a GOD. Just look at your children. You don't need a telescope to know you're not alone. Just look across the table. Seem simple minded? It is...but it's absolute truth. The Hubble is amazing and is helping scientist (the people that are qualified..sorry Mo) understand the universe. It's up to us to believe or not believe that there's a God or that we're not alone. That's our individual choice. your choice, your voice.
Blackholes represent the death of the universe. The glowing white center of the galaxy pictured represents matter as it heats up and falls over the event horizon as it is being torn apart by tremendous gravitational forces.
Looks like a Supernova, Gary. Black holes aren't that visible, unless surrounded by a star cluster.
I don't think God made this...one reason to wipe God out of our...beliefs, if God made us in 'His' own image, wouldn't he need to breathe air too? If so, wouldn't He be in one of the galaxies and not "Heaven", because as far as we know, all that exists is the universe and before the universe, there was nothing...at all, so God does not exist. Simple. The galaxies were made by very large explosions, not God. And, I think that God would let us live in Heaven anyway, not Earth, because if you actually read the Bible, he made the Devil, he was an angel with free will, Mr. Devil chose to do something nasty and then God sent him to Hell, if God wanted to create us, he would have made us in Heaven given us no free will and we would all be stuck in a pink cloudy place with lots of fluffy bunnies and a bearded 'before-the-universe-started' old man abusing his powers, does that sound like the reasonable God? No? Did I make a valid point, so are you all going to shut up how marvellous God is for making it, because you know he didn't?
Either we are alone in the universe or we are not. Either way is awesome.


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