This illustration shows astronomers’ current understanding of the large-scale structure of the Milky Way. Stars and star-forming regions are largely grouped into spiral arms. Measuring the shape, size, and number of spiral arms is a challenge because Earth is locate inside the galaxy. Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech
The newly discovered feature offers insight into the large-scale structure
of our galaxy, which is difficult to study from Earth’s position inside it.
Scientists have spotted a previously unrecognized feature of our Milky Way galaxy: A contingent of young
stars and star-forming gas clouds is sticking out of one of the Milky Way’s
spiral arms like a splinter poking out from a plank of wood. Stretching some
3,000 light-years, this is the first major structure identified with an
orientation so dramatically different than the arm’s.
Astronomers have a rough idea of the size and shape of the Milky Way’s
arms, but much remains unknown: They can’t see the full structure of our home
galaxy because Earth is inside it. It’s akin to standing in the middle of Times
Square and trying to draw a map of the island of Manhattan. Could you measure
distances precisely enough to know if two buildings were on the same block or a
few streets apart? And how could you hope to see all the way to the tip of the
island with so many things in your way?
A contingent of stars
and star-forming clouds was found jutting out from the Milky Way's Sagittarius
Arm. The inset shows the size of the structure and distance from the Sun. Each
orange star shape indicates star-forming regions that may contain anywhere from
dozens to thousands of stars. Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech
Young stars and nebulae are thought to
align closely with the shape of the arms they reside in. To get a 3D view of
the arm segment, the scientists used the latest data release from the ESA
(European Space Agency) Gaia mission to measure the precise distances to the
stars. The combined data revealed that the long, thin structure associated with
the Sagittarius Arm is made of young stars moving at nearly the same velocity
and in the same direction through space.
“A key property of spiral arms is how tightly they
wind around a galaxy,” said Michael Kuhn, an astrophysicist at Caltech and lead
author of the new paper. This characteristic is measured by the arm’s pitch
angle. A circle has a pitch angle of 0 degrees, and as the spiral becomes more
open, the pitch angle increases. “Most models of the Milky Way suggest that the
Sagittarius Arm forms a spiral that has a pitch angle of about 12 degrees, but
the structure we examined really stands out at an angle of nearly 60 degrees.”
Similar structures – sometimes called spurs or
feathers – are commonly found jutting off the arms of other spiral galaxies.
For decades scientists have wondered whether our Milky Way’s spiral arms are
also dotted with these structures or if they are relatively smooth.
Measuring the Milky Way
The newly discovered feature contains four nebulae known for their
breathtaking beauty: the Eagle Nebula (which contains
the Pillars of Creation), the Omega Nebula, the Trifid Nebula, and the Lagoon Nebula. In the 1950s, a team
of astronomers made rough distance measurements to some of the stars in these
nebulae and were able to infer the existence of the Sagittarius Arm. Their work
provided some of the first evidence of our galaxy’s spiral structure.
“Distances are among the most difficult things to measure in astronomy,”
said co-author Alberto Krone-Martins, an astrophysicist and lecturer in
informatics at the University of California, Irvine and a member of the Gaia
Data Processing and Analysis Consortium (DPAC). “It is only the recent, direct
distance measurements from Gaia that make the geometry of this new structure so
apparent.”
In the new study, researchers also relied on a catalog of more than a
hundred thousand newborn stars discovered by Spitzer in a survey of the galaxy
called the Galactic Legacy Infrared Mid-Plane Survey Extraordinaire (GLIMPSE).
“When we put the Gaia and Spitzer data together and finally see this
detailed, three-dimensional map, we can see that there’s quite a bit of
complexity in this region that just hasn’t been apparent before,” said Kuhn.
Shown here (from left) are the Eagle, Omega, Triffid, and Lagoon Nebulae,
imaged by NASA’s infrared Spitzer Space Telescope. These nebulae are part of a
structure within the Milky Way’s Sagittarius Arm that is poking out from the
arm at a dramatic angle.
Credits: NASA/JPL-Caltech
Astronomers don’t yet fully understand what causes spiral arms to form in
galaxies like ours. Even though we can’t see the Milky Way’s full structure,
the ability to measure the motion of individual stars is useful for
understanding this phenomenon: The stars in the newly discovered structure
likely formed around the same time, in the same general area, and were uniquely
influenced by the forces acting within the galaxy, including gravity and shear
due to the galaxy’s rotation.
“Ultimately, this is a reminder that there are many uncertainties about the
large-scale structure of the Milky Way, and we need to look at the details if
we want to understand that bigger picture,” said one the paper’s co-authors,
Robert Benjamin, an astrophysicist at the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater
and a principal investigator on the GLIMPSE survey. “This structure is a small
piece of the Milky Way, but it could tell us something significant about the
Galaxy as a whole.”
More About the Mission
The Gaia spacecraft operations team works from the European Space
Operations Centre (ESOC) in Germany, while the science operations are performed
at the European Space Astronomy Centre (ESAC) in Spain. A consortium of more
than 400 scientists and engineers are responsible for the processing of the
data.
More information on the Gaia Data Releases can be found here: https://www.cosmos.esa.int/web/gaia/release.
For more information about Gaia, visit: https://sci.esa.int/web/gaia , https://www.cosmos.esa.int/web/gaia , https://archives.esac.esa.int/gaia
NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, a division of Caltech, managed Spitzer
mission operations for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate in Washington.
Science operations were conducted at the Spitzer Science Center at IPAC at
Caltech. Spacecraft operations were based at Lockheed Martin Space in
Littleton, Colorado. The Spitzer data archive is housed at the Infrared Science
Archive at IPAC at Caltech in Pasadena, California.
For more information about NASA’s Spitzer mission, go to: https://www.jpl.nasa.gov/missions/spitzer-space-telescope , https://www.ipac.caltech.edu/project/spitzer
For more information about the Gaia mission, go to: https://www.cosmos.esa.int/gaia , https://archives.esac.esa.int/gaia
Source: https://www.nasa.gov/feature/jpl/astronomers-find-a-break-in-one-of-the-milky-way-s-spiral-arms
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