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TOPIC: Milky Way


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Kiwi Discovered in Outer Space

An astrophotographer has discovered a Kiwi in outer space from New Zealand's internationally renowned Mt John Observatory.
It may be 26,000 light years away, but a high powered astro-photograph has picked up the distinct image of New Zealand's national icon in the centre of the Milky Way Galaxy.

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'Giga Galaxy Zoom' offers tour of Milky Way
The name is already taken, but "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy" might be a fitting title for a new interactive view of the Milky Way unveiled this week by the European Southern Observatory.
The 800-million-pixel panorama shows an edge-on view of the plane of our galaxy, complete with points of interests such as the 12-billion-year-old, star-packed globular cluster Omega Centauri and the beautiful, reddish Rosette Nebula.


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www.gigagalaxyzoom.org


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Astronomer predicts galaxy collision
Earth is going to be eaten alive by another galaxy, new research shows.
But don't worry -- Andromeda, the closest galaxy to Earth, is still 2.5 million light years away.

"That is close by cosmic standards" - John Dubinski, an astronomer at the University of Toronto who is a co-author of the report just published in the journal Nature.

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Time lapse video of night sky as it passes over the 2009 Texas Star Party in Fort Davis, Texas. The galactic core of Milky Way is brightly displayed. Images taken with 15mm fisheye lens.

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Patterns of a type of high-energy radiation called gamma rays throughout the Milky Way aren't the signature of mysterious dark matter as had previously been suggested, a new study shows.
Over the past five years, gamma-ray measurements from the European satellite INTEGRAL have perplexed astronomers because the distribution of the gamma rays across different parts of the Milky Way didn't match what astronomers expected to see.
Some astronomers suggested that various forms of dark matter - the intangible stuff thought to make up about 98 percent of all matter in the universe - might be the source of these gamma rays, which would be further proof the existence of the mysterious matter.


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A team of astrophysicists has solved a mystery that led some scientists to speculate that the distribution of certain gamma rays in our Milky Way galaxy was evidence of a form of undetectable "dark matter" believed to make up much of the mass of the universe.
In two separate scientific papers, the most recent of which appears in the July 10 issue of the journal Physical Review Letters, the astrophysicists show that this distribution of gamma rays can be explained by the way "antimatter positrons" from the radioactive decay of elements, created by massive star explosions in the galaxy, propagate through the galaxy. Thus, the scientists said, the observed distribution of gamma rays is not evidence for dark matter.


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Using ESOs Very Large Telescope, astronomers have obtained one of the sharpest views ever of the Arches Cluster - an extraordinary dense cluster of young stars near the supermassive black hole at the heart of the Milky Way. Despite the extreme conditions astronomers were surprised to find the same proportions of low- and high-mass young stars in the cluster as are found in more tranquil locations in our Milky Way.

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Galactic Center
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Spitzer Space Telescope

Astronomers have at last uncovered newborn stars at the frenzied center of our Milky Way galaxy. The discovery was made using the infrared vision of NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope.
The heart of our spiral galaxy is cluttered with stars, dust and gas, and at its very center, a supermassive black hole. Conditions there are harsh, with fierce stellar winds, powerful shock waves and other factors that make it difficult for stars to form. Astronomers have known that stars can form in this chaotic place, but they're baffled as to how this occurs. Confounding the problem is all the dust standing between us and the center of our galaxy. Until now, nobody had been able to definitively locate any baby stars.

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Arches Cluster
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Stellar family in crowded, violent neighbourhood proves to be surprisingly normal
Using ESOs Very Large Telescope, astronomers have obtained one of the sharpest views ever of the Arches Cluster - an extraordinary dense cluster of young stars near the supermassive black hole at the heart of the Milky Way. Despite the extreme conditions astronomers were surprised to find the same proportions of low- and high-mass young stars in the cluster as are found in more tranquil locations in our Milky Way.

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