This composite color infrared image
of the center of our Milky Way galaxy reveals a new opulation of
massive stars and new details in complex structures in the hotionized
gas swirling around the central 300 light-years. This sweeping panorama
is the sharpest infrared picture ever made of the Galactic core. It
offers a nearby laboratory for how massive stars form and influence
their environment in the often violent nuclear regions of other
galaxies.
This view combines the sharp
imaging of the Hubble Space Telescope's Near Infrared Camera and
Multi-Object Spectrometer (NICMOS) with color imagery from a previous
Spitzer Space Telescope survey done with its Infrared Astronomy Camera
(IRAC). The Galactic core is obscured in visible light by intervening
dust clouds, but infrared light penetrates the dust.
The spatial resolution of the NICMOS corresponds to 0.025 light-years
at the distance of the Galactic core of 26,000 light-years. Hubble
reveals details in objects as small as 20 times the size of our own
solar system.
The NICMOS mosaic image represents the largest piece of sky ever mapped
for one NICMOS observing program. It was combined with a full-color
Spitzer image to yield a color composite of the nuclear region. The
picture measures 300 x 115 light-years. Outside the boundary of the
NICMOS survey, the IRAC exposures (which are 1/10th as sharp) can be
seen at wavelengths of 3.6 microns (shown as blue), 4.5 microns (shown
as green), 5.8 microns (shown as orange), and 8.0 microns (shown as
red).
The new NICMOS data show the glow from ionized hydrogen gas as well as
a multitude of stars. Hubble reveals an important population of stars
with strong stellar winds, signified by excess emission from ionized
gas at one infrared wavelength (1.87 microns) compared to another
slightly different wavelength (1.90 microns).
NICMOS shows a large number of these massive stars distributed
throughout the region. A new finding is that astronomers now see that
the massive stars are not confined to one of the three known clusters
of massive stars in the Galactic Center, known as the Central cluster,
the Arches cluster, and the Quintuplet cluster. These three clusters
are easily seen as tight concentrations of bright, massive stars in the
NICMOS image. The distributed stars may have formed in isolation, or
they may have originated in clusters that have been disrupted by strong
gravitational tidal forces.
The winds and radiation from these stars form the complex structures
seen in the core, and in some cases, they may be triggering new
generations of stars. At upper left, large arcs of ionized gas are
resolved into arrays of intriguingly organized linear filaments
indicating perhaps a critical role of the influence of locally strong
magnetic fields.
The lower left region shows pillars of gas sculpted by winds from hot
massive stars in the Quintuplet cluster. At the center of the image,
ionized gas surrounding the supermassive black hole at the center of
the galaxy is confined to a bright spiral embedded within a
circum-nuclear dusty inner-tube-shaped torus.
The NICMOS mosaic required 144 Hubble orbits to make 2,304 science
exposures. It was taken between February 22 and June 5, 2008.
Credit for Hubble image: NASA, ESA, and Q.D. Wang (University of
Massachusetts, Amherst)
Credit for Spitzer image: NASA, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, and S.
Stolovy (Spitzer Science Center/Caltech)
For images and more information, visit:
http://hubblesite.org/news/2009/02
http://www.nasa.gov/hubble
For additional information, contact:
Ray Villard
Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore, Md.
410-338-4514
villard@stsci.edu
Q. Daniel Wang
University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Mass.
413-545-2131
wqd@astro.umass.edu
Close-ups of the P-alpha emission
associated with compact HII regions in the equatorial coordinates. The
scale bar assumes a distance of 8 kpc.