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Space

We can finally map the spiral arm on the far side of the galaxy

By Leah Crane

12 October 2017

The Milky Way

Soon to be mapped: our galaxy the Milky Way

NASA/JPL-Caltech/R. Hurt (SSC/Caltech)

We鈥檙e putting the far side of the galaxy on the map. The聽most precise measurement yet of an object on the far side of the galaxy鈥檚 centre is paving the way for a definitive map of the other side of the Milky Way.

It鈥檚 difficult to observe anything on that side of the galaxy because of the dense, frenetic swarm of dust and gas at its centre. at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Massachusetts and his colleagues got around this by looking at a jet of radio waves that can outshine any emissions coming from that mess of stars.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a very bright source, indicative of a flamboyant region of star formation, and these regions are almost always located in the spiral arms of the galaxy,鈥 says Dame. He and his team pinned down the source鈥檚 location to the Scutum-Centaurus arm of the galaxy, probably one of the Milky Way鈥檚 two major arms.

To do this, they used parallax measurements, which take into account differences in measurements from two points in space. If you hold a finger up at arm鈥檚 length and close one eye, then the other, your finger will appear to move over slightly 鈥 聽that small discrepancy is called parallax. The closer the object is to the observer, and the further apart the two observing locations, the larger the parallax.

Building a better map

The object that Dame and his colleagues measured is so far away that to determine its parallax, they had to measure it over the course of a whole year, taking observations at either side of Earth鈥檚 orbit around the sun.

鈥淭hese angles that are being measured are mind-boggling,鈥 says Dame. 鈥淚n this case it鈥檚 about 50 arcseconds, which is smaller than the size of Neil Armstrong鈥檚 footprint on the moon viewed from Earth.鈥

That tiny parallax angle corresponds to a distance of 66,500 light years. It鈥檚 the furthest distance ever measured via parallax, and the first time it鈥檚 been used for an object on the other side of the galaxy.

Since much of our understanding of structure that part of the Milky Way comes from assumptions based on knowledge of the near side, parallax measurements may allow us to build a more accurate map of our entire galaxy.

鈥淭he idea that you could be doing this for more objects on the far side of the galaxy is really exciting,鈥 says at the University of Wisconsin, Whitewater. 鈥淗ow can you talk about the structure of our galaxy when you only have half of it?鈥

Dame says with this technique we could have an accurate and complete map of the entire Milky Way within 10 years.

Science

Read more: Mapping the Milky Way: What鈥檚 where in our galaxy

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