Diving into the Galaxy Pool

Wearing Ultraviolet Swim Goggles

Its Galaxies (almost) All the Way Out!
It's Galaxies (nearly) All the Way Out! (Click to embiggen)

This is a region of space called the Chandra Deep Field-South, a region of the sky that fascinates astronomers so much that it is one of the best-studied in the whole sky. Over the past few years and into the future, astronomers have been and will be concentrating on this region and one other in the northern sky as part of the GOODS survey, to do the deepest, most sensitive observations they can with every observatory on the ground and in space, in every wavelength possible.

The European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope took its turn, along with the 2.2-eter MPG/ESO telescope. Together they gazed for 55 hours, using the ultraviolet-sensitive VIMOS instrument on VLT and the Wide-field Imager on the MPG/ESO telescope at La Silla.

They announced the result today: a 27-million-pixel-wide image that shows a  pool of galaxies, many of them appearing as they were when the universe was only 2 billion years old.  These most distant galaxies are a billion times fainter than the unaided eye can see, and not easily visible to optical instruments. Ultraviolet-sensitive instruments like VIMOS (which focused on wavelengths of light in a range between UV and optical), when used in longer exposures, can catch enough of the light from these distant galaxies to reveal them for us to see.

Nearly everything you see in this image (with the exception of a few bright stars in the foreground (part of the Milky Way Galaxy) is a galaxy. Each of those galaxies has billions of stars.

Now, here’s a thought-provoking idea to chew over while you gaze at this picture:  the universe looks the same no matter what direction we look in — that is, it has a roughly similar distribution of structure (galaxies and clusters of galaxies) in all directions.  This means that if we could point telescopes in all directions of the sky (without interference from the Milky Way) the distant universe would look like this all over the sky. Think about it–countless millions or billions of galaxies… some dating back to the childhood of the cosmos!

Owl Be Seein’ Ya

In All the Old Familiar Places

The Owl in teh Veil
The Owl in the Veil (click to embiggen). By Paul Mortfield and Stefano Cancelli

Like the Veil Nebula.  A pair of highly cool amateur astronomers named Paul Mortfield, of Backyard Astronomer fame, and Stefan Cancelli of Astro Garage made this image from observations of the Veil Nebula. It was featured on Astronomy Picture of the Day on November 1.

I don’t know about you, but I see a huge flying owl in the expanding cloud of dust and debris that marks the spot where a supernova exploded somewhere between five and eight thousand years ago.

They took their image from their observatories in the Sierra Nevadas of California, using specialty filters and no doubt some image processing to sharpen the view. Red indicates hydrogen gas, blue is oxygen and green is a combination of the two. The whole thing makes for an incredibly beautiful image.

I encourage you to check out these guys and their work at the links above. Amateurs are (as I have always felt) making incredibly good contributions to our appreciation and study of the universe.