Archive for NASA

GALEX: la galaxia de Andrómeda

A tan sólo 2,5 millones años luz de distancia, la galaxia de Andrómeda se encuentra como quien dice justo al lado. Tan cerca , y con un diámetro de unos 260.000 años luz, que se necesitaron 11 campos diferentes de imágenes del telescopio del satélite Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) para crear esta magnífica vista en luz ultravioleta de la galaxia espiral. Mientras que en las imágenes en luz visible de Andrómeda (también conocida como M31) destacan los brazos espirales, en esta vista ultravioleta del GALEX , dominada por estrellas jóvenes, calientes y masivas, los brazos parecen más bien anillos.

Como regiones de intensa formación estelar, estos anillos suponen la evidencia de que Andrómeda colisionó con la pequeña galaxia elíptica vecina M32 hace más de 200 millones de años. La galaxia de Andrómeda y nuestra Vía Láctea son los miembros predominantes del grupo local de galaxias .

Herschel Sees Intergalactic Bridge Aglow With Stars


A Star-Bursting Filament

The Herschel Space Observatory has discovered a giant, galaxy-packed filament ablaze with billions of new stars.

Herschel Sees Intergalactic Bridge Aglow With Stars

A Star-Bursting Filament The Herschel Space Observatory has discovered a giant, galaxy-packed filament ablaze with billions of new stars. The filament connects two clusters of galaxies that, along with a third cluster, will smash together in several billion years and give rise to one of the largest galaxy superclusters in the universe. Image credit: ESA/NASA/JPL-Caltech/CXC/McGill Univ.
 
The Herschel Space Observatory has discovered a giant, galaxy-packed filament ablaze with billions of new stars. The filament connects two clusters of galaxies that, along with a third cluster, will smash together and give rise to one of the largest galaxy superclusters in the universe. 

Herschel is a European Space Agency mission with important NASA contributions.

The filament is the first structure of its kind spied in a critical era of cosmic buildup when colossal collections of galaxies called superclusters began to take shape. The glowing galactic bridge offers astronomers a unique opportunity to explore how galaxies evolve and merge to form superclusters.

“We are excited about this filament, because we think the intense star formation we see in its galaxies is related to the consolidation of the surrounding supercluster,” says Kristen Coppin, an astrophysicist at McGill University in Canada, and lead author of a new paper in Astrophysical Journal Letters.

“This luminous bridge of star formation gives us a snapshot of how the evolution of cosmic structure on very large scales affects the evolution of the individual galaxies trapped within it,” says Jim Geach, a co-author who is also based at McGill.

The intergalactic filament, containing hundreds of galaxies, spans 8 million light-years and links two of the three clusters that make up a supercluster known as RCS2319. This emerging supercluster is an exceptionally rare, distant object whose light has taken more than seven billion years to reach us.

RCS2319 is the subject of a huge observational study, led by Tracy Webb and her group at McGill. Previous observations in visible and X-ray light had found the cluster cores and hinted at the presence of a filament. It was not until astronomers trained Herschel on the region, however, that the intense star-forming activity in the filament became clear. Dust obscures much of the star-formation activity in the early universe, but telescopes like Herschel can detect the infrared glow of this dust as it is heated by nascent stars.

The amount of infrared light suggests that the galaxies in the filament are cranking out the equivalent of about 1,000 solar masses (the mass of our sun) of new stars per year. For comparison’s sake, our Milky Way galaxy is producing about one solar-mass worth of new stars per year.

Researchers chalk up the blistering pace of star formation in the filament to the fact that galaxies within it are being crunched into a relatively small cosmic volume under the force of gravity. “A high rate of interactions and mergers between galaxies could be disturbing the galaxies’ gas reservoirs, igniting bursts of star formation,” said Geach.

By studying the filament, astronomers will be able to explore the fundamental issue of whether “nature” versus “nurture” matters more in the life progression of a galaxy. “Is the evolution of a galaxy dominated by intrinsic properties such as total mass, or do wider-scale cosmic environments largely determine how galaxies grow and change?” Geach asked. “The role of the environment in influencing galactic evolution is one of the key questions of modern astrophysics.”

The galaxies in the RCS2319 filament will eventually migrate toward the center of the emerging supercluster. Over the next seven to eight billion years, astronomers think RCS2319 will come to look like gargantuan superclusters in the local universe, like the nearby Coma cluster. These advanced clusters are chock-full of “red and dead” elliptical galaxies that contain aged, reddish stars instead of young ones.

“The galaxies we are seeing as starbursts in RCS2319 are destined to become dead galaxies in the gravitational grip of one of the most massive structures in the universe,” said Geach. “We’re catching them at the most important stage of their evolution.”

Herschel is a European Space Agency cornerstone mission, with science instruments provided by consortia of European institutes and with important participation by NASA. NASA’s Herschel Project Office is based at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. JPL contributed mission-enabling technology for two of Herschel’s three science instruments. The NASA Herschel Science Center, part of the Infrared Processing and Analysis Center at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, supports the United States astronomical community. Caltech manages JPL for NASA.
More information is online at http://www.herschel.caltech.edu , http://www.nasa.gov/herschel and http://www.esa.int/SPECIALS/Herschel.

 

Written by Adam Hadhazy
Whitney Clavin 818-354-4673
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
whitney.clavin@jpl.nasa.gov

Cygnus X por el Observatorio Herschel

Esta imagen infrarroja de Cygnus X , obtenida por el Observatorio Espacial Herschel, abarca unos 6 x 2 grados de una de las regiones de formación de estrellas masivas más cercanas en el plano de nuestra galaxia, la Vía Láctea. De hecho, la rica guardería estelar contiene el cúmulo de estrellas masivas conocido como la asociación Cygnus OB2. Pero estas estrellas son más evidentes en la región aclarada por los vientos energéticos y la radiación que hay cerca de la parte inferior central de este campo y que no detectan los instrumentos del Herschel que operan en longitudes de onda infrarrojas largas .

En cambio, el Herschel revela complejos filamentos de gas frío y polvo que van a parar a lugares densos donde se forman nuevas estrellas masivas.

Cygnus X se encuentra a unos 4.500 años luz de distancia en el corazón de la constelación septentrional del Cisne. A esta distancia, esta imagen tendría casi 500 años luz de ancho.

El CNA pone en marcha un servicio de diagnóstico por imagen mediante un dispositivo PET-CT

El Centro Nacional de Aceleradores (CNA), centro de investigación formado por la Universidad de Sevilla, la Junta de Andalucía y el Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC), oferta por primera vez a la comunidad médica investigadora nacional e internacional su equipo PET/CT para la realización de investigación y ensayos clínicos con pacientes.

El equipamiento que el Centro de Diagnóstico por Imagen del CNA, CDI-CNA, pone a disposición de la comunidad investigadora para este tipo de estudios es un equipo híbrido PET/CT de última generación que permite obtener información tanto funcional como anatómica del paciente. Se trata de un escáner PET/CT fabricado por Siemens, modelo Molecular CT (mCT-64).

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NASA Lends Galaxy Evolution Explorer to Caltech


The Galaxy Next Door

NASA is lending the Galaxy Evolution Explorer to the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, where the spacecraft will continue its exploration of the cosmos.


NASA Survey Counts Potentially Hazardous Asteroids


Simulated, edge-on view of our solar system

Observations from NASA’s Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) have led to the best assessment yet of our solar system’s population of potentially hazardous asteroids.


Pedro Duque abre el congreso internacional sobre la Industria Aeroespacial que se celebra esta semana en Sevilla

Unas 290 empresas y entidades de todo el mundo pertenecientes al ámbito aeronáutico y aeroespacial participan esta semana en el Aerospace & Defense Meetings Sevilla 2012 (ADM), un congreso organizado por la Junta de Andalucía a través de Extenda-Agencia Andaluza de Promoción Exterior, que busca potenciar la actividad de negocio entre los principales agentes del sector. La conferencia de apertura ha sido impartida por el astronauta de la Agencia Espacial Europea (ESA) Pedro Duque, que ha hablado de “Los retos del espacio”.

Segundo lanzamiento de Ariane 5 en 2012

En la madrugada de hoy, un lanzador Ariane 5 partía del Puerto Espacial Europeo, en la Guayana Francesa, con la misión de poner en una órbita de transferencia geoestacionaria a dos satélites de telecomunicaciones, JCSAT-13 y Vinasat-2.

Conexión en directo: Los finalistas europeos del concurso SpaceLab hablan con André Kuipers

El 16 de mayo, los finalistas europeos del concurso Google YouTube SpaceLab viajaran al Centro Europeo de Astronautas para presentar sus experimentos ante astronautas, científicos, educadores y otros estudiantes, y para hablar en directo con el astronauta europeo André Kuipers, a bordo de la ISS. Puedes seguirlo en directo de 14:30 a 16:40 CEST.

JPL Invites all Earthlings to Annual Open House


Annual Open House event with plenty of hands-on activities and opportunities to talk with scientists and engineers

NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., invites the public to its annual Open House on Saturday, June 9, and Sunday, June 10, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.