News on interstellar matter
- Cygnus-X: the cool swan glowing in flight
- New molecules and star formation in the Milkyway
- The dust in the belt of Orion
- Missing dark matter in interstellar space around the Sun
- New 15meter telescope first ligth
- Tiny particles key to understanding early solar system
- New WISE catalog of entire infrared sky
- The Milkyway is full of bubbles
- Discovery of solid buckyballs in space
- Sources of rare Earth-elements found in space
- Dark clouds in Taurus
- Alien matter in the Solar system
- New mapping show cold gas and strange haze
- The sound of the universe
- Discovery of million degrees hot molecular gasses
- Most detailed infrared image of the Carina nebula
- An interstellar star-nursery
- Infrared image of the famous Helix-nebula
- Widefield infrared view of Milkyway's dust
- The smoky core of the Omega Nebula M17
- Star rebels against its parent cloud
- Observation of a cool gas-cloud being swallowed by black hole
- European astronomers discover cocoons of radiation in nebula
- SOFIA airborne observatory views star forming region W40
- The Cool Clouds of the Carina-nebula
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Plancks view of the microwave sky
Monday, 05 July 2010 11:26
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| Astronomy - Interstellar matter |
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ESA’s Planck mission has delivered its first all-sky image. It not only provides new insight into the way stars and galaxies form but also tells us how the Universe itself came to life after the Big Bang. “This is the moment that Planck was conceived for,” says ESA Director of Science and Robotic Exploration, David Southwood. “We’re not giving the answer. We are opening the door to an Eldorado where scientists can seek the nuggets that will lead to deeper understanding of how our Universe came to be and how it works now. The image itself and its remarkable quality is a tribute to the engineers who built and have operated Planck. Now the scientific harvest must begin.” From the closest portions of the Milky Way to the furthest reaches of space and time, the new all-sky Planck image is an extraordinary treasure chest of new data for astronomers.
The main disc of our Galaxy runs across the centre of the image. Immediately striking are the streamers of cold dust reaching above and below the Milky Way. This galactic web is where new stars are being formed, and Planck has found many locations where individual stars are edging toward birth or just beginning their cycle of development. Less spectacular but perhaps more intriguing is the mottled backdrop at the top and bottom. This is the ‘cosmic microwave background radiation’ (CMBR). It is the oldest light in the Universe, the remains of the fireball out of which our Universe sprang into existence 13.7 billion years ago.
The microwave pattern is the cosmic blueprint from which today’s clusters and superclusters of galaxies were built. The different colours represent minute differences in the temperature and density of matter across the sky. Somehow these small irregularities evolved into denser regions that became the galaxies of today. When this work is completed, Planck will show us the most precise picture of the microwave background ever obtained. The big question will be whether the data will reveal the cosmic signature of the primordial period called inflation. This era is postulated to have taken place just after the Big Bang and resulted in the Universe expanding enormously in size over an extremely short period. Planck continues to map the Universe. By the end of its mission in 2012, it will have completed four all-sky scans. The first full data release of the CMBR is planned for 2012. Before then, the catalogue containing individual objects in our Galaxy and whole distant galaxies will be released in January 2011. “This image is just a glimpse of what Planck will ultimately see,” says Jan Tauber, ESA’s Planck Project Scientist. |





