A new analysis of pulsing stars has revealed the Milky Way’s twisted shape.
Scientists have known since the 1950s that the spiral-shaped Milky Way’s disk is warped, bending by thousands of light-years at its outskirts.
Now, researchers have created a map of stars called Cepheid variables in order to create a 3D map of our galaxy and understand the warping better than ever.
Though past analysis has established that the hydrogen gas in our galaxy takes on a warped shape, questions have remained as to whether stars follow the same shape or not.So the researchers from universities in China and Australia built a model of the Milky Way’s disk using a well-known distance measure: stars called Cepheid variables.
Cepheids pulse with a regular period that varies with their brightness. That means that if you know the pulsation period, you can infer the star’s actual luminosity, then compare that with the luminosity observed from Earth in order to determine the distance.
The researchers gathered 2,330 Cepheid variables catalogued by an infrared telescope called the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer, and whittled down the list to 1,339 stars based on their distance, models of the Milky Way, and other factors. You can see their final plot in the video below, published in Nature Astronomy.
The stars appeared to take on the same shape as the hydrogen gas, warping out to around 50,000 light-years from the Milky Way’s center. However, the hydrogen gas appears to warp more than the stars do, specifically on one of the disk’s sides.The warping might sound strange compared to common assumptions about how the Milky Way looks, but isn’t a huge surprise. Scientists have observed other similarly warped galactic disks, and the team inferred that the rotational forces from the inner galaxy were producing the warped shape.
One researcher not involved with this study, Annie Robin, astrophysicist at the Observatoire de Besançon in France, thought the difference between the hydrogen and the Cepheid data was quite surprising, though the team’s results did agree with previous papers. She also pointed out it would have helped to include more data.
“The study is good, but the sample used is somewhat still small (1,339),” said Robin. “This is a pity because Gaia has just published a much larger sample of Cepheids (9,575). Hence, it would be worth it to redo the study with Gaia sample, and to refine the model.”
But the research solidifies something that you might not know about our galaxy—if you picture it as a beautiful, flat spiral akin to images of Andromeda, it’s time to repaint that picture as a floppy, curved disk of stars and gas.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=89PR-vq9Zc4
empty mars promises again..
NASA has delayed the first flight of its Ingenuity Mars helicopter after a crucial test-spin of the drone's rotor blades abruptly stopped.
Load Error - ???????
This was the last major test to make sure the helicopter would be ready for its first flight, which was originally scheduled for early Monday. Now NASA has delayed the historic liftoff - which would mark the first powered, controlled flight on another planet - to Wednesday.
For the test on Friday, Ingenuity was supposed to spin its blades at full speed while on the ground. The two pairs of blades should have spun in opposite directions at more than 2,500 rotations per minute - about eight times faster than an Earth helicopter. On flight day, they'll need that speed to lift the 4-pound drone into the thin Martian atmosphere. That air has just 1% the density of Earth's atmosphere, making Ingenuity's task the equivalent of flying three times higher than the peak of Mount Everest.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sweYWDsHHgo
Mysterious ‘gravity waves’ seen rippling out over our atmosphere
Spectacular rippling waves spread out in the atmosphere above Australia last week - showing off a little-known phenomenon: gravity waves.
‘Gravity waves’ are very different to gravitational waves, the ripples from distant collisions in space captured by detectors on Earth - and refer to waves in our atmosphere.
They’re often caused by collisions between air masses of different temperatures, creating ‘ripples’ which can be seen by satellites.
Weather expert Andrew Miskelly said, ‘More atmospheric gravity waves. Triggered, in this case, by outflow from isolated thunderstorms over eastern NSW this afternoon.’
Adam Morgan of the Australian Bureau of Meteorology told ABC, ‘There was a big thunderstorm over the north-west of WA and the disturbance in this case was the cold air falling out of the thunderstorm and into the warmer air near the surface.
‘The difference in density there causes the disturbance and then the gravity wave can travel out as the cold air spreads out.
‘The disturbance will exist until everything rebalances itself, that's why they can travel a long way.’
The waves are known as ‘gravity waves’ because they are rebalanced by gravity, Science Alert reports.
;)
there are two takes in this vid:
take 1 : Atmospheric gravity waves over the Coral Sea this morning.
take 2 : More atmospheric gravity waves. Triggered, in this case, by outflow from isolated thunderstorms over eastern NSW this afternoon.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6TX6SCP3EWI
Astronomers announced on Wednesday that at last they had seen the unseeable: a black hole, a cosmic abyss so deep and dense that not even light can escape it.
“We’ve exposed a part of our universe we’ve never seen before,” said Shep Doeleman, an astronomer at Harvard University who directed the effort to capture the image, during a Wednesday news conference in Washington, D.C. The image, of a lopsided ring of light surrounding a dark circle deep in the heart of the galaxy known as Messier 87, some 55 million light-years away from here, resembled the Eye of Sauron, a reminder yet again of the power and malevolence of nature. It was a smoke ring framing a one-way portal to eternity.To capture the image, astronomers reached across intergalactic space to a giant galaxy in Virgo, known as Messier 87. There, a black hole about seven billion times more massive than the sun is unleashing a violent jet some 5,000 light years into space.The image offered a final, ringing affirmation of an idea so disturbing that even Einstein, from whose equations black holes emerged, was loathe to accept it. If too much matter is crammed into one place, the cumulative force of gravity becomes overwhelming, and the place becomes an eternal trap, a black hole. Here, according to Einstein’s theory, matter, space and time come to an end and vanish like a dream.On Wednesday morning that dark vision became a visceral reality. When the image was put up on the screen in Washington, cheers and gasps, followed by applause, broke out.
The image emerged from two years of computer analysis of observations from a network of radio antennas called the Event Horizon Telescope. In all, eight radio observatories on six mountains and four continents observed the galaxies Sagittarius and Virgo on and off for 10 days in April 2017.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LKMn-dkavHE