by iamlucky13 » Wed Aug 22, 2007 7:37 pm
Andy Wade wrote:bystander wrote:http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap070822.html
I assume the stars with diffration spikes are in our own galaxy, but are all the other stars in the LMC? And the cluster on the left edge center (9:30), is that in the LMC? There seem to be a lot of small star clusters in this picture, were they all formed within the Tarantula Nebula?
Beautiful picture. My compliments to ESO.
Yes indeed. It is a beautiful picture.
ISTR reading that all stars that can be resolved as individual points are in our own Milky Way galaxy.
In most images that would be true, however, I think this is an exception. The LMC is much closer than any other galaxy, so the resolution is higher.
The star density seems too great unless perhaps the LMC happens to be in the same plane as the Milky Way (I'm pretty sure it's not, though), in which case we could be looking through one of our galaxies arms at it. Even then, the angle distance between stars seems small for nearby stars. We're looking at an area only about 1/2 degree across.
Also, the star density is very uniform across the image, but if you look at the green-ish portion of the nebula in the full-size image, you can see that the apparent density is much lower, suggesting that some of those stars are in front of the nebula and some are behind and obscured by it.
So I think bystander is right. The stars with diffraction spikes are in our own galaxy and the rest are in the LMC.
It's worth checking out an overall picture of the LMC for perspective:
http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap040902.html
[quote="Andy Wade"][quote="bystander"][url]http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap070822.html[/url]
I assume the stars with diffration spikes are in our own galaxy, but are all the other stars in the LMC? And the cluster on the left edge center (9:30), is that in the LMC? There seem to be a lot of small star clusters in this picture, were they all formed within the Tarantula Nebula?
Beautiful picture. My compliments to ESO.[/quote]
Yes indeed. It is a beautiful picture.
ISTR reading that all stars that can be resolved as individual points are in our own Milky Way galaxy.[/quote]
In most images that would be true, however, I think this is an exception. The LMC is much closer than any other galaxy, so the resolution is higher.
The star density seems too great unless perhaps the LMC happens to be in the same plane as the Milky Way (I'm pretty sure it's not, though), in which case we could be looking through one of our galaxies arms at it. Even then, the angle distance between stars seems small for nearby stars. We're looking at an area only about 1/2 degree across.
Also, the star density is very uniform across the image, but if you look at the green-ish portion of the nebula in the full-size image, you can see that the apparent density is much lower, suggesting that some of those stars are in front of the nebula and some are behind and obscured by it.
So I think bystander is right. The stars with diffraction spikes are in our own galaxy and the rest are in the LMC.
It's worth checking out an overall picture of the LMC for perspective:
http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap040902.html