A team of researchers
at the University of Warsaw has created the most accurate 3-D model of the
Milky Way Galaxy to date. In their paper published in the journal Science, the
group explains how they used measurements from a special group of pulsating stars
to creole the map.
Most
people imagine the Milky Way as a flat spiral – that is the way it has been
shown in school textbooks for years. In more recent times, however, scientists
have discovered that our galaxy is not flat at all- it is more like a wobbly
uncooked pizza crust that has been tossed into the air. In this new
effort, the researchers have found that our galaxy is even more wobbly
than has been suspected.
To
create their new map, the researchers used data from the Optical Gravitational
Lensing Experiment- a long term sky surveying project based at the University
of Warsaw. More specifically the researchers wanted data regarding Cepheids,
which are a unique type of pulsating star. They were useful to the researchers
because they pulse with regularity and brightness. This means that their true
brightness can be calculated and compared to the brightness of them as seen
here from Earth – doing so allows for very accurate measuring how far-away from
us they are. By amassing data from 2,431 Cepheids (collected over six
years) and putting them all on a map together, the researchers were able
to produce a 3D representation of the Milky Way, at least from the
perspective of Cepheids. The model they created is the first to be built using
direct measurements of star distances, thus it is the most accurate to date.
In
studying the 3D model, they are created, the researchers were able to see that
the Milky Way is far from flat. They could also see that it gets less flat the
farther from the sun it goes. They noted also that the Cepheids appeared to be
grouped into clusters, suggesting that they may have formed at or near the same
time. The researchers also suggest the warping was likely caused by
interactions with other galaxies, dark matter or intergalactic gas.
Source:
phys.org
Journal
article: https://science.sciencemag.org/content/365/6452/478
Source: https://myfusimotors.com/2020/09/30/a-3-d-model-of-the-milky-waygalaxy-using-data-from-cepheids/
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