Category Archives: astronomy news

We’re Mergiin UR galaxies…

Makin’ New Starzzzzz

NGC 4449 merging up a storm of starbirth...
NGC 4449 merging up a storm of starbirth...

That’s how we say that star birth is found everywhere in the universe, in “leetspeak.” In geekspeak, we say that this picture is an excellent example of starburst regions in a galaxy that lies 12.5 million light-years away. Hubble Space Telescope imaged galaxy NGC 4449 with the Advanced Camera for Surveys, in blue, visible, infrared and H-alpha light.

Starbirth is one of the great recycling mechanisms of the cosmos. It takes material just lying around in interstellar space (in just about any galaxy) and turns it into stars. It’s a process that’s been going on for nearly as long as there’s been stuff in interstellar space to use (more than 13 billion years, for those of you keeping score at home). It’s a complicated process because a cloud of stuff just hanging there in space isn’t likely to wake up one day and say “Gee, I think I’ll become a star.” Something actually has to happen to make the cloud particles (gases and some dust) start to clump up and whirl around in a crazy birth process. It needs a push of some kind to start those materials clumping together. Maybe like a gravitational heave-ho from a passing star (that’s an old favorite). Or, even better, a nearby massive star goes supernova and the outburst shoves the gas cloud molecules and dust grains together. If there’s enough stuff to push together and enough of a push, the process gets started.

For NGC 4449, the process was likely started by a merger with another galaxy. When galaxies mingle, their clouds of gas and dust can get compressed, and that can start up the starbirth nursery. If the mingling is widespread, you get pictures like this one: a galaxy ablaze with starbirth regions. No matter how you say it, that makes for some pretty spectacular images. Read more about it here.

A Little Spring Break

But Back in time for Astronomy Day

I took some time away from writing here to work on the next issue of GeminiFocus, the twice-a-year publication from Gemini Observatory. It’s due at the printer in a week or two, and I’ve spent the past few weeks working on articles for it.

I’ve worked with Gemini Observatory for several years now, doing writing and editing in support of the public information office. Before that, the only contact I really had with the observatory was when I needed images for publications. One of my favorite Gemini images is a shot of the superbubble complex N44 in the Large Magellanic Cloud (some 160,000 light-years away).

Gemini Legacy Image of superbubble complex N44 as imaged with GMOS on the Gemini South Telescope in Chile.  Composite color image by Traivs Rector, University of Alaska Anchorage.
Gemini Legacy Image of superbubble complex N44 as imaged with GMOS on the Gemini South Telescope in Chile. Composite color image by Travis Rector, University of Alaska Anchorage.

This thing looks so cool; three-dimensional, spacey, colorful—all the things that make it aesthetically pleasing (to me, anyway). And, as always, I think I’m pretty lucky to be doing what I’m doing, all courtesy of astronomers who are out there checking out the universe and sharing it with the rest of us through beautiful telescope views like this one.
So, in honor of Astronomy Day, I’m going to go out Saturday night and check out the sky with my binoculars to see what I can find. It may not look as pretty or high-resolution as this image,but that’s not the point of Astronomy Day. The point is to (as the cruise line commercials here in the U.S. say) get out there!!

That’s what Astronomy Day is all about; getting out there and checking the sky out for yourself.