The NASA New Horizons
spacecraft’s extensive observations of Lyman-alpha emissions have resulted in
the first-ever map from the galaxy at this important ultraviolet wavelength,
providing a new look at the galactic region surrounding our solar system. The
findings are described in a new study authored by the SwRI-led New Horizons
team.
“Understanding the Lyman-alpha
background helps shed light on nearby galactic structures and processes,” said
SwRI’s Dr. Randy Gladstone, the study’s lead investigator and first author of
the publication. “This research suggests that hot interstellar gas bubbles like
the one our solar system is embedded within may actually be regions of enhanced
hydrogen gas emissions at a wavelength called Lyman alpha.”
Lyman-alpha is a specific wavelength of
ultraviolet light emitted and scattered by hydrogen atoms. It is especially
useful to astronomers studying distant stars, galaxies and the interstellar
medium, as it can help detect the composition, temperature and movement of
these distant objects.
During its initial journey to Pluto, New
Horizons collected baseline data about Lyman-alpha emissions using the Alice
instrument, an SwRI-developed ultraviolet spectrograph. A spectrograph is a
tool astronomers use to split light into its various colors. Alice specializes
in the far-ultraviolet wavelength band.
After the spacecraft’s primary
objectives at Pluto were completed, scientists used Alice to make broader and
more frequent surveys of Lyman-alpha emissions as New Horizons traveled farther
from the Sun. These surveys included an extensive set of scans in 2023 that
mapped roughly 83% of the sky.
To isolate emissions from the galaxy,
the New Horizons team modeled scattered solar Lyman-alpha emissions and
subtracted them from the spectrograph’s data. The results indicate a roughly
uniform background Lyman alpha sky brightness 10 times stronger than expected
from previous estimates.
“These results point to the emission and
scattering of Lyman-alpha photons by hydrogen atoms in the shell of a hot
bubble, known to surround our solar system and nearby stars, that was formed by
nearby supernova events a few million years ago,” Gladstone said.
The study also found no evidence that a
hydrogen wall, thought to surround the Sun’s heliosphere, substantially
contributes to the observed Lyman-alpha signal. Scientists had theorized that a
wall of interstellar hydrogen atoms would accumulate as they encountered the
edge of our heliosphere, the vast region of space dominated by the solar wind
as it interacts with the interstellar medium. However, the New Horizons data
saw nothing to indicate the wall is an important source of Lyman-alpha
emissions.
“These are really landmark observations,
in giving the first clear view of the sky surrounding the solar system at these
wavelengths, both revealing new characteristics of that sky and refuting older
ideas that the Alice New Horizons data just doesn’t support,” said co-author
and New Horizons Principal Investigator Dr. Alan Stern. “This Lyman-alpha map
also provides a solid foundation for future investigations to learn even more.”
Journal article: https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.3847/1538-3881/adc000
Source: New Horizons observations lead to first Lyman-alpha map from the galaxy – Scents of Science

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