logo
Astronomers create a dazzling, elaborate map of nearby galaxy in thousands of colors

Astronomers create a dazzling, elaborate map of nearby galaxy in thousands of colors

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — Astronomers have revealed a nearby spiral galaxy in all its brilliant glory, shining in thousands of colors.
The dazzling panoramic shot released Wednesday of the Sculptor galaxy by a telescope in Chile is so detailed that it's already serving as a star-packed map.
Scientists used the European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope to observe the galaxy for some 50 hours, stitching together more than 100 exposures to create the picture. The image spans 65,000 light-years, almost the entire galaxy. A light-year is 5.8 trillion miles.
Sculptor — officially labeled NGC 253 — is considered a starburst galaxy, one heavy with stellar action. It's located 11 million light-years away in the Southern Hemisphere's constellation Sculptor, and easy to view with binoculars or small telescopes.
'The Sculptor galaxy is in a sweet spot,' the observatory's Enrico Congiu, who led the research, said in a statement. 'It is close enough that we can resolve its internal structure and study its building blocks with incredible detail, but at the same time, big enough that we can still see it as a whole system.'
The more shades of color from stars, gas and dust in a galaxy, the more clues to their age, composition and motion, according to the scientists. Sculptor's latest snapshot contains thousands of colors — a glowing montage of purples, pinks and yellows — compared with just a handful for traditional pictures.
The team has already discovered 500 planetary nebulae, clouds of gas and dust from dying stars that can serve as cosmic mile markers. Their research has been accepted for publication in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics.
Wednesdays
Columnist Jen Zoratti looks at what's next in arts, life and pop culture.
___
The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute's Science and Educational Media Group and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

First images shared from the Vera C. Rubin Observatory reveal why it will change astronomy forever
First images shared from the Vera C. Rubin Observatory reveal why it will change astronomy forever

Globe and Mail

time2 hours ago

  • Globe and Mail

First images shared from the Vera C. Rubin Observatory reveal why it will change astronomy forever

For years, astronomers involved with the Vera C. Rubin Observatory have said that their purpose is nothing less than creating the greatest cosmic movie ever made. Now, more than a decade after construction of the observatory began on a Chilean mountaintop, the first test frames of that movie are in. Those images, released to the public on Monday, show much more than an arresting new look at the universe. They are a turning point in how humanity's exploration of the universe will be conducted. Even those who are used to explaining the observatory's scientific goals are finding themselves enthralled by the wonder of it all. 'It's really an 'oh-wow' moment,' said Clare Higgs, a Canadian astrophysicist who joined the U.S.-led project three years ago as an outreach specialist. 'We have heard for so long that Rubin is going to be an amazing observatory,' she said. 'And we know it has so much groundbreaking engineering, and the largest camera ever built.' But seeing the data in real life, Dr. Higgs said, has brought home what the milestone means to her field. 'I'm really excited for the world to see that,' she said. 'And then to know that this is just the beginning. It's just the first taste.' As a way to help frame the dawn of a new era, those involved in the observatory's first campaign have chosen as their initial targets subjects that are familiar to backyard astronomers and are known by common nicknames rather than by catalogue numbers. But they have never been seen like this before. In one view, two billowing cauldrons of ionized gas known as the Lagoon and Trifid nebulas sprawl across a crowded section of our Milky Way galaxy more than 4,000 light years from Earth. These are star-forming regions, where tendrils of dark dust hide new solar systems in the making. Another selection shows a pair of close-ups from a large view of the Virgo cluster of galaxies. Located some 65 million light years away, each elongated blob of light is a separate galaxy containing billions of stars. Held together by their mutual gravity and by a surrounding halo of invisible dark matter, they are the largest concentration of mass in our cosmic vicinity. Both exhibit a degree of visual splendour that is almost surreal when compared to how these objects are normally seen. Reproductions of those images for this story are a merest hint of the quantity and quality of information the observatory's 3.2 gigapixel camera can take in. To display just one image from the camera, reproduced at full size, would require an array of 400 ultrahigh-definition (4K) television screens. It's this staggering capacity that allows the observatory to see both very wide and very deep at the same time. Until now, astronomical telescopes have had to trade one for the other – either broadening out to take in more of the sky at the expense of detail, or narrowing in to capture fine features within a tiny region. 'The design of this telescope means that we get to have our cake and eat it, too, and I just don't think we're prepared for what that means,' said Renée Hlozek, an associate professor at the University of Toronto and a program lead with Canada's contribution to the project. The result is a telescope that is ideal for uncovering the distribution and influence of dark matter, a mysterious substance that emits no light but that accounts for about 85 per cent of the mass of the universe. Starting in the 1960s, American astronomer Vera Rubin provided compelling evidence for the existence of dark matter based on the way it influences the rotation of spiral galaxies. Now the telescope that is her namesake will study dark matter across the universe as a whole, by using a technique called 'weak gravitational lensing.' It is a way of using subtle distortions in the shapes of distant galaxies to measure the gravitational influence of the dark matter threading its way through the cosmos like a vast interconnected web. This, in turn, can also be used to examine the behaviour of dark energy, an even less understood phenomenon whose presence is causing the expansion of space to accelerate. In combination, the two phenomena drive the evolution and fate of the universe. What the new observatory is poised to do, Dr. Hlozek said, is measure both with enough precision to determine which competing cosmological theories are better at explaining them, and which fail to do so. 'We're entering this phase where there's going to be so much data that you begin to rule out things,' she said. Rubin also has an additional superpower that makes it unique among the world's major observatories. It has the ability to explore what astronomers call 'the time domain.' Because its giant camera can capture so much light so quickly, it is expected that it will image the entire sky available to it every few nights. These repeated surveys can then be assembled into a massive, time-lapse view of the cosmos that will begin later this year and run at least a decade. Anything that changes in position or brightness, from asteroids whizzing by our planet to supernovas exploding in the distant universe, will be spotted by a system that compares every picture of the sky it takes to a picture of the same area it took previously. In effect, the idea of the universe as a giant ocean full of unknowns which individual telescopes can dip into like fishermen casting their lines is coming to an end. In its place is an ocean rendered transparent by a giant surveillance tool that will see everything within its reach across a 10 year swath of time. 'It means that we'll discover a lot of objects that we know we should be there, that we think might be there, but that we haven't found,' Dr. Hlozek said. 'The places where something can hide cosmologically are going to rapidly decrease.' Making all of this possible requires a vast data pipeline and a network of 'alert brokers' to inform the research community of the flood of discoveries the telescope picks up. 'Things that are one-in-a-million events – we'll find them because there are lots of one-in-a-million events when you're thinking on the scale of billions," Dr. Higgs said. The need to deal with so much data is part of what has allowed Canada to make in-kind contributions to the project in the form of high-performance computing and a platform for the global research community to access the observatory's data once they become public. Stephen Gwyn, a science data specialist with Canada's Herzberg Astronomy and Astrophysics Research Centre in Victoria, is among those leading the effort. He said the observatory is set to realize its promise because of how precisely its measurements are calibrated across a sweeping field of view and across time. 'Knowing exactly how bright a star is is one thing; knowing how bright 20 billion stars are is a much more complex problem,' Dr. Gwyn said. 'What they are doing is going to be the best by a significant margin at getting the brightnesses of things exactly right.' Before any of that was possible, the observatory and its 8.4 metre telescope first had to be conceived – jointly funded by the National Science Foundation and the U.S. Department of Energy – and built on Cerro Pachón, a mountain in the Chilean Andes where astronomers have found some of the best viewing conditions on Earth. 'The location is majestic,' said Alison Rose, a Canadian filmmaker who has been documenting the observatory's construction since 2017. What has been most striking about the project, she said, is the fundamental humanity of it, as teams of scientists, engineers and builders, working across continents and cultures, have assembled something of unprecedented capability. Speaking to The Globe and Mail from Chile, Ms. Rose said that her years of witnessing the effort and coming to know those at the heart of it have left her with an indelible take-away: 'It is important to try and do the hardest thing you can do.' In April she was present the night the telescope's optics were turned on the sky for the first time. Since then the project has shifted rapidly from a construction site to a working research facility, leading up to the first public image release, with watch parties organized for Monday morning at 11 a.m. ET when the images will be livestreamed during a news conference in Washington. One such party will be at the University of Toronto, Dr. Hlozek said. Another is planned at the University of Waterloo, where a team of researchers has been working with the Rubin Observatory for several years. Among them is Liza Sazonova, a postdoctoral research fellow who is preparing to work with Rubin Observatory data to study colliding galaxies. 'We have no idea what we're going to see,' Dr. Sazonova said as she considered the flood of new data that will soon be heading her way. 'But we know we're going to look at the sky differently.'

Sunrise at Stonehenge draws druids, pagans and revellers to celebrate the summer solstice
Sunrise at Stonehenge draws druids, pagans and revellers to celebrate the summer solstice

Toronto Sun

time2 days ago

  • Toronto Sun

Sunrise at Stonehenge draws druids, pagans and revellers to celebrate the summer solstice

Published Jun 21, 2025 • 2 minute read People gather at Stonehenge, England, during sunrise on the summer solstice, the longest day of the year, Saturday, June 21, 2025. Photo by Zhanna Manukyan / AP LONDON — As the sun rose on the longest day of the year Saturday, a crowd erupted in cheers at Stonehenge where the ancient monument in southern England has clocked the summer solstice over thousands of years. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. THIS CONTENT IS RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBERS ONLY Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. SUBSCRIBE TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. REGISTER / SIGN IN TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account. Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments. Enjoy additional articles per month. Get email updates from your favourite authors. THIS ARTICLE IS FREE TO READ REGISTER TO UNLOCK. Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors Don't have an account? Create Account The orange ball crested the northeast horizon behind the Heel Stone, the entrance to the stone circle, and shone its beam of light into the centre of one of the world's most famous prehistoric monuments. The solstice is one of the few occasions each year when visitors are allowed to walk among the stones, which are otherwise fenced off. The crowd gathered before dawn at the World Heritage Site to mark the start of summer in the Northern Hemisphere, beating the heat during the U.K.'s first amber heat-health alert issued since September 2023. Temperatures later topped 33 degrees Celsius (91.4 degrees Fahrenheit) in Surrey, 80 miles (128 kilometres) east of Stonehenge, the hottest temperature recorded in the U.K. this year. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. About 25,000 sun devotees and other revellers, including druids, pagans, hippies, locals and tourists, showed up, according to English Heritage which operates the site. More than 400,000 others around the world watched a livestream. 'This morning was a joyous and peaceful occasion with the most beautiful sunrise,' said Richard Dewdney, head of operations at Stonehenge. 'It is fantastic to see Stonehenge continuing to enchant and connect people.' Stonehenge was built in stages 5,000 years ago on the flat lands of Salisbury Plain approximately 75 miles (120 kilometres) southwest of London. The unique stone circle was erected in the late Neolithic period about 2,500 B.C. Some of the so-called bluestones are known to have come from the Preseli Hills in southwest Wales, nearly 150 miles (240 kilometres) away, and the altar stone was recently discovered to have come from northern Scotland, some 460 miles (740 kilometres) away. The site's meaning has been vigorously debated. Theories range from it being a coronation place for Danish kings, a druid temple, a cult centre for healing, or an astronomical computer for predicting eclipses and solar events. The most generally accepted interpretation is that it was a temple aligned with movements of the sun — lining up perfectly with the summer and winter solstices. Columnists Toronto & GTA Editorial Cartoons Sunshine Girls World

Sunrise at Stonehenge draws druids, pagans and revelers to celebrate the summer solstice
Sunrise at Stonehenge draws druids, pagans and revelers to celebrate the summer solstice

Winnipeg Free Press

time2 days ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Sunrise at Stonehenge draws druids, pagans and revelers to celebrate the summer solstice

LONDON (AP) — As the sun rose on the longest day of the year Saturday, a crowd erupted in cheers at Stonehenge where the ancient monument in southern England has clocked the summer solstice over thousands of years. The orange ball crested the northeast horizon behind the Heel Stone, the entrance to the stone circle, and shone its beam of light into the center of one of the world's most famous prehistoric monuments. The solstice is one of the few occasions each year when visitors are allowed to walk among the stones, which are otherwise fenced off. The crowd gathered before dawn at the World Heritage Site to mark the start of summer in the Northern Hemisphere, beating the heat during the U.K.'s first amber heat-health alert issued since September 2023. Temperatures later topped 33 degrees Celsius (91.4 degrees Fahrenheit) in Surrey, 80 miles (128 kilometers) east of Stonehenge, the hottest temperature recorded in the U.K. this year. About 25,000 sun devotees and other revelers, including druids, pagans, hippies, locals and tourists, showed up, according to English Heritage which operates the site. More than 400,000 others around the world watched a livestream. 'This morning was a joyous and peaceful occasion with the most beautiful sunrise,' said Richard Dewdney, head of operations at Stonehenge. 'It is fantastic to see Stonehenge continuing to enchant and connect people.' Stonehenge was built in stages 5,000 years ago on the flat lands of Salisbury Plain approximately 75 miles (120 kilometers) southwest of London. The unique stone circle was erected in the late Neolithic period about 2,500 B.C. Some of the so-called bluestones are known to have come from the Preseli Hills in southwest Wales, nearly 150 miles (240 kilometers) away, and the altar stone was recently discovered to have come from northern Scotland, some 460 miles (740 kilometers) away. The site's meaning has been vigorously debated. Theories range from it being a coronation place for Danish kings, a druid temple, a cult center for healing, or an astronomical computer for predicting eclipses and solar events. The most generally accepted interpretation is that it was a temple aligned with movements of the sun — lining up perfectly with the summer and winter solstices.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store