Posted on 05/12/2015 12:33:15 PM PDT by Red Badger
Astronomers have been arguing over just how many spiral arms our galaxy exhibits. Is the Milky Way a four or two-armed spiral galaxy? Astronomers had often assumed the Milky Way was potentially a four-armed spiral galaxy, but comparatively recent observations from NASA's Spitzer telescope implied the galaxy had two spiral arms. In 2013, astronomers mapped star forming regions and argued they had found the two missing arms, bringing the total number of arms back to four.
The case for a four-armed Milky Way may have just gotten stronger.
A team of Brazilian astronomers used star clusters embedded in their natal clouds to trace the galaxy's structure. "Our results favour a four-armed spiral galaxy, which includes the Sagittarius-Carina, Perseus, and outer arms," remarked the group from the Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul.
"Despite efforts aimed at improving our understanding of the galaxy's structure, questions remain. There is no consensus regarding the number and shape of the galaxy's spiral arms.", noted lead author D. Camargo. He added that the sun's location within the obscured disc of the galaxy was a principal factor hindering our understanding of the Milky Way's broader structure. In other words, we do not have a bird's eye view of our galaxy.
The team remarked that young embedded clusters are excellent tracers of the galaxy's structure, "The present results indicate that the galaxy's embedded clusters are predominantly located in the spiral arms." They noted that star formation may occur after the collapse and fragmentation of giant molecular clouds found within spiral arms, and consequently the young embedded star clusters that subsequently emerge are excellent probes of galactic structure as they have not displaced far from their birthplace.
The team used data from NASA's WISE infrared telescope to identify young clusters still embedded in their natal clouds, which are often encompassed by significant dust. Infrared stellar light is less obscured by dust than visible light, giving the astronomers an unprecedented view. Indeed, the group discovered 7 new embedded clusters, several of which (designated Camargo 441-444) may belong to a larger aggregate that resides in the Perseus arm. They suggested that a giant molecular cloud was compressed by the spiral arm which may have triggered star formation in several clumps, and numerous star clusters with similar ages emerged (an alternative or concurrent scenario is sequential formation).
The team also used near-infrared data from the 2MASS survey to determine distances for the star clusters, once the objects were identified in the WISE images. A primary goal of their work was to establish accurate fundamental cluster parameters, which would bolster any resulting conclusions concerning the galaxy's overall structure. An innovative algorithm was therefore adopted to minimize contamination by foreground and background stars along the sight-line, which may otherwise appear as cluster members and degrade the reliability of any distant estimates.
"The embedded clusters in the present sample are distributed along the Sagittarius-Carina, Perseus, and outer arms.", concluded the team. They likewise noted that the search for new embedded clusters throughout the entire galaxy must continue unabated, since such targets may foster our understanding of the galaxy's structure.
The discoveries are described in a new study by D. Camargo, C. Bonatto, and E. Bica that is entitled "Tracing the galactic spiral structure with embedded clusters". The research has been accepted for publication, and will appear in a forthcoming issue of the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (MNRAS). A preprint of the work is available on arXiv.
In a new study by Camargo et al. 2015 star-forming regions similar to that shown in the above image were used to trace the Galaxys structure. Credit: NASA, ESA, J. M. Apellániz
Spiral map of the Galaxy by Urquhart et al. 2013. Credit: Urquhart et al. 2013, R. Hurt, the Spitzer Science Center, R. Benjamin
A projected face-on view of the distribution of embedded star clusters studied by Camargo et al. 2015. The objects appear to lie on the Sagittarius-Carina spiral arm, Perseus arm, and potentially an extension of the Outer arm. Credit: Camargo et al. 2015
Space Ping!...........
3.5 arms.
It had an accident.
Are they absolutely SURE two of them aren't legs?
That’s why we sometimes feel out of place. We’re 2 arm creatures in a 4 arm galaxy.
Launch a probe to go out of the galaxy far enough to take a look back. We should have the data back in 20-30,000 generations!
You cannot leave the Galaxy..............
We must be in a arm pit.............
Like a 4 blade Ceiling fan, if one breaks, you just remove the opposite one and you have a 2 blade fan..............It’ll turn faster, too!..........
Merely a flesh wound.
We should rename the Milky Way “Eric”. Eric the half a galaxy.
Speaking of “turning faster”, the core turns faster than the arms, causing a “winding up” effect.
If the galaxy is as old as claimed,
why are the “arms” still there?
This related information may be interesting: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stellar_kinematics#Moving_groups
Does that mean the Milky Way is just a galactic swastika?
The gravitational pull bends the fabric of space-time less and less the farther you get from the center, so they outer parts are relatively slower being pulled in?...........
Well,it would have been a giant Yin-Yang symbol..............
Sheldon Cooper will be really upset, now.............
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.