by Ann » Tue Jan 06, 2015 8:36 am
To me this looks like a typical "scientific" image, although likely prettified a little for public use. Its aim, as far as I can understand, is to find out as much as possible about the stellar populations of Andromeda in order to unlock the secrets of of our big sister galaxy's star forming history. But Hubble has done its photography job using only two filters, 475W and 814W. I'm glad that one of the filters is pretty blue, at least. The other is an infrared one.
I can't help being reminded of
Gaia's mission in our own galaxy. Gaia is going to map one million stars in the Milky Way and determine their
parallaxes and therefore the distances to them. Gaia is equipped with only two filters, a red and a blue one. So while its
astrometry is going to be superb, its
spectrophotometry will leave something to be desired.
It seems to me that Hubble has done something resembling what Gaia will do, except that the stars it has photographed are in Andromeda rather than in the Milky Way. Hubble has photographed a hundred times more stars than Gaia will measure, but Hubble probably hasn't measured any parallaxes in Andromeda.
Ann
To me this looks like a typical "scientific" image, although likely prettified a little for public use. Its aim, as far as I can understand, is to find out as much as possible about the stellar populations of Andromeda in order to unlock the secrets of of our big sister galaxy's star forming history. But Hubble has done its photography job using only two filters, 475W and 814W. I'm glad that one of the filters is pretty blue, at least. The other is an infrared one.
I can't help being reminded of [url=http://sci.esa.int/gaia/]Gaia's mission in our own galaxy[/url]. Gaia is going to map one million stars in the Milky Way and determine their [url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parallax]parallax[/url]es and therefore the distances to them. Gaia is equipped with only two filters, a red and a blue one. So while its [url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Astrometry]astrometry[/url] is going to be superb, its [url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spectrophotometry]spectrophotometry[/url] will leave something to be desired.
It seems to me that Hubble has done something resembling what Gaia will do, except that the stars it has photographed are in Andromeda rather than in the Milky Way. Hubble has photographed a hundred times more stars than Gaia will measure, but Hubble probably hasn't measured any parallaxes in Andromeda.
Ann