• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Feast Your Eyes On The Most Detailed 1,000-Color Image Of A Nearby Galaxy

June 19, 2025 by Deborah Bloomfield

The Sculptor galaxy is a stunning spiral galaxy, 11 million light-years away, and it is currently experiencing an intense period of star formation. It was discovered by Caroline Herschel in 1783, yet we can guarantee that a new view of the Sculptor Galaxy by the European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope has never been seen before. This new map of the Sculptor contains thousands of colors.

Most astronomical images use wide-band filters that capture light across a large range of wavelengths. These can be, for example, red, blue, or green. But a lot of astronomical events emit at specific wavelengths, so using those allows you to distinguish specific emissions; or speaking in colors, your ruby from your rose or your cerulean from your lapis.

To make this thousand-color map, astronomers used over 50 hours with the Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE) instrument on ESO’s Very Large Telescope. More than 100 exposures were stitched in this glorious new map of the Sculptor galaxy.

A huge disk spiral galaxy scattered with pink light to show the ionised hydrogen star-forming regions and becoing more orange-yellow towards the center of the spiral

The pink light comes from ionized hydrogen in star-forming regions overlaid on a map of already formed stars (blue).

Image credit: ESO/E. Congiu et al.

“Galaxies are incredibly complex systems that we are still struggling to understand. The Sculptor Galaxy is in a sweet spot,” lead author ESO researcher Enrico Congiu 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 observations cover an area of the galaxy 65,000 light-years across. Among the first studies of the map, the team looked for planetary nebulae, the regions of dust and gas that dying stars like the Sun create by shedding stellar material. The researchers confirmed around 500 in the Sculptor Galaxy, a record number that will have larger repercussions due to their milestone-like properties.

“Beyond our galactic neighbourhood, we usually deal with fewer than 100 detections per galaxy,” co-author Fabian Scheuermann, from Heidelberg University, puts the number into context.

“Finding the planetary nebulae allows us to verify the distance to the galaxy — a critical piece of information on which the rest of the studies of the galaxy depend,” added co-author Professor Adam Leroy, from Ohio State University.

This false-color composition shows wavelengths of light  released by hydrogen (pink), nitrogen (red), sulphur (yellow), and oxygen (green). The cone of white light is the outflow of gas from the glaxy's central black hole.

This false-color composition shows wavelengths of light released by hydrogen (in an artistic pink rather than its actual blueish color), nitrogen (red), sulphur (yellow), and oxygen (green). The cone of white light is the outflow of gas from the galaxy’s central black hole.

Image credit: ESO/E. Congiu et al.

It’s not just the end of stars but also the beginning, studying the details of star formation at a level that has not been possible before for galaxies beyond the local group.

“We can zoom in to study individual regions where stars form at nearly the scale of individual stars, but we can also zoom out to study the galaxy as a whole,” added Kathryn Kreckel from Heidelberg University.

This is just the beginning. The team plans to understand the gas flows, their evolution, and where and how this gas ends up forming stars. “How such small processes can have such a big impact on a galaxy whose entire size is thousands of times bigger is still a mystery,” added Congiu.

A paper describing the results is published in Astronomy & Astrophysics.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Apple Wallet is getting verifiable COVID-19 vaccination cards
  2. Musk Reveals “Optimus” Tesla Robot, But Some Folks Aren’t Impressed
  3. Twitter Says It Is No Longer Stopping Any COVID-19 Misinformation
  4. Sapphires Are Cooked Up By Volcanic Fury – And Now We Know How

Source Link: Feast Your Eyes On The Most Detailed 1,000-Color Image Of A Nearby Galaxy

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Positive Nihilism: Is Meaninglessness The Key To Happiness?
  • Feast Your Eyes On The Most Detailed 1,000-Color Image Of A Nearby Galaxy
  • Engineering YouTuber Weighs An Airbus A320 Plane Whilst It Is Still Flying
  • Australian Moth Is First-Known Invertebrate To Navigate By Stars On Epic 1,000-Kilometer Migration
  • Losing Two Legs Doesn’t Slow Tarantulas Down Or Make Them More Unstable
  • Who Dislikes The Other More, Democrats Or Republicans? This Study Found Out
  • Thar Desert: A Biodiversity Hotspot That’s Also The Most Densely Populated Desert In The World
  • Oldest Footprints In North America Really Are Over 20,000 Years Old, New Analysis Confirms
  • Why Homo Sapiens Failed To Migrate Out Of Africa Until 60,000 Years Ago
  • An Unexpected Organ May Help Sharks Fight Disease
  • The World’s Largest Sand Battery Was Just Switched On In Finland
  • First-Known Species Of “Methane-Powered” Sea Spiders Have Been Discovered In The Deep Sea
  • In 2010, The US Made Guns Easier To Get. The Result? Thousands Of Dead Kids
  • The 13th Century “Codex Gigas” Or “The Devil’s Bible” Is The Subject Of An Unsettling Legend
  • The Hottest Thing Ever Created By Humans Was Over 300,000 Times Hotter Than The Sun
  • Defying Logic: Symmetrical Crystals Can Interact With Light Asymmetrically
  • Alaska Issues Its First-Ever Heat Advisory As Temperatures Soar To 30°C
  • Simulation Captures The Most Complex 1.5 Seconds In A Neutron Star Collision – And You Can Watch It Here
  • These Spiders Vomit Their Victims To Death, Regurgitating Toxic Goo Until It’s Dinner
  • Atomic Discrepancy Could Be Hint Of Fifth Force Of Nature
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version