Category Archives: astronomy research

Celebrating 19 Years of Hubble Space Telescope

Wow!!!

Arp 194 -- two colliding galaxies, a streamer of star birth and a background galaxy -- all shown by HST.  (Click to embiggen.)
Arp 194 -- two colliding galaxies, a streamer of star birth and a background galaxy -- all shown by HST. (Click to embiggen.)

HST is probably the undisputed champion imager of colliding galaxies. For 19 years it’s been showing us the view as distant things go “bump” in the night. So, it’s only natural that the folks at Space Telescope Science Institute and the European Hubble office would celebrate the telescope’s 19th year on orbit with a smashing image of galaxy collision.  This one’s a doozy, folks!

This image actually shows a trio of galaxies, only two of which are doing the actual interacting.  The trio is called Arp 194, At first glance, it looks like one of them has sprung a leak. The bright blue streamer is really a stretched spiral arm full of newborn blue stars.  You see these a lot during the aftermath of galaxy collisions and this is easily one of the most impressive ‘star fountain’ formations I’ve ever seen.

The two nuclei of the colliding galaxies can be seen in the process of merging at the upper left — they look like a pair of owl eyes. The blue bridge looks like it connects to a third galaxy. In reality the galaxy is in the background and not connected at all — although astronomers aren’t sure yet if there is any interaction between it and the northern pair of galaxies (which are interacting). Hubble’s sharp view allows astronomers to try and visually sort out what are foreground and background objects when galaxies, superficially, appear to overlap.

This whole scene is playing out about 600 million light-years from us, in the direction of the constellation Cepheus. The region has a number of interesting galaxy interactions, so this little galactic birthday party will likely not be the last that HST sees.

I must say, this is a great birthday card for HST. The telescope’s accomplishments are many: during the past 19 years Hubble has made more than 880,000 observations and snapped over 570,000 images of 29,000 celestial objects.

Space Weather FX

Episode 2

The second in our series of videos (vodcasts) on space weather has gone live on the MIT Haystack Observatory Web site. We are currently working on a third episode to be out in early October. The series teaches about space weather and its effects on our planet and our technology.

This second episode is just about 4 minutes long and talks about the main ingredients of space weather:  magnetic fields and plasmas.  It was a challenging one to produce because I wanted to find a suitable-level model of magnetic field generation inside our own planet, and finally ended up creating my own. I also ended up creating a basic little visual sequence about how plasmas form.

Episode 1 is an introduction and is 6.5 minutes long. Both star scientist Philip J. Erickson (who is an atmospheric researcher at MIT Haystack) and yours truly gets to do the voice-over work. The episodes are aimed at about a 5th or 6th grade level and are ideal for classroom or home use. They’re accompanied by a page of links for further investigation, and we’re working on getting closed-captioning versions ready, as well. Eventually we’ll get an evaluation form up there, so if you’re a teacher and you’re using these, we’ll be interested in your feedback. Check ’em out!