Webb telescope captures 'stunning' images of 19 spiral galaxies
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[January 30, 2024]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A batch of newly released images captured by the
James Webb Space Telescope show in remarkable detail 19 spiral galaxies
residing relatively near our Milky Way, offering new clues on star
formation as well as galactic structure and evolution.
The images were made public on Monday by a team of scientists involved
in a project called Physics at High Angular resolution in Nearby
GalaxieS (PHANGS) that operates across several major astronomical
observatories.
The closest of the 19 galaxies is called NGC5068, about 15 million light
years from Earth, and the most distant of them is NGC1365, about 60
million light years from Earth. A light year is the distance light
travels in a year, 5.9 trillion miles (9.5 trillion km).
The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) was launched in 2021 and began
collecting data in 2022, reshaping the understanding of the early
universe while taking wondrous pictures of the cosmos. The orbiting
observatory looks at the universe mainly in the infrared. The Hubble
Space Telescope, launched in 1990 and still operational, has examined it
primarily at optical and ultraviolet wavelengths.
Spiral galaxies, resembling enormous pinwheels, are a common galaxy
type. Our Milky Way is one.
The new observations came from Webb's Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam) and
Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI). They show roughly 100,000 star clusters
and millions or perhaps billions of individual stars.
"These data are important as they give us a new view on the earliest
phase of star formation," said University of Oxford astronomer Thomas
Williams, who led the team's data processing on the images.
"Stars are born deep within dusty clouds that completely block out the
light at visible wavelengths - what the Hubble Space Telescope is
sensitive to - but these clouds light up at the JWST wavelengths. We
don't know a lot about this phase, not even really how long it lasts,
and so these data will be vital for understanding how stars in galaxies
start their lives," Williams added.
About half of spiral galaxies have a straight structure, called a bar,
coming out from the galactic center to which the spiral arms are
attached.
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Spiral galaxy NGC 1300, located 69 million light-years away from
Earth, is seen in an undated image from the James Webb Space
Telescope. NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, Janice Lee (STScI), Thomas
Williams (Oxford), and the PHANGS team/Handout via REUTERS
"The commonly held thought is that galaxies form from the
inside-out, and so get bigger and bigger over their lifetimes. The
spiral arms act to sweep up the gas that will form into stars, and
the bars act to funnel that same gas in towards the central black
hole of the galaxy," Williams said.
The images let scientists for the first time resolve the structure
of the clouds of dust and gas from which stars and planets form at a
high level of detail in galaxies beyond the Large Magellanic Cloud
and Small Magellanic Cloud, two galaxies considered galactic
satellites of the sprawling Milky Way.
"The images are not only aesthetically stunning, they also tell a
story about the cycle of star formation and feedback, which is the
energy and momentum released by young stars into the space between
stars," said astronomer Janice Lee of the Space Telescope Science
Institute in Baltimore, principal investigator for the new data.
"It actually looks like there was explosive activity and clearing of
the dust and gas on both cluster and kiloparsec (roughly 3,000 light
years) scales. The dynamic process of the overall star formation
cycle becomes obvious and qualitatively accessible, even for the
public, which makes the images compelling on many different levels,"
Lee added.
Webb's observations build on Hubble's.
"Using Hubble, we would see the starlight from galaxies, but some of
the light was blocked by the dust of galaxies," University of
Alberta astronomer Erik Rosolowsky said. "This limitation made it
hard to understand parts of how a galaxy operates as a system. With
Webb's view in the infrared, we can see through this dust to see
stars behind and within the enshrouding dust."
(Reporting by Will Dunham, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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