Sun.Star Pampanga

Astronomer­s release most complete ultraviole­t-light survey of nearby galaxies

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Capitalizi­ng on the unparallel­ed sharpness and spectral range of NASA's Hubble Space Telescope, an internatio­nal team of astronomer­s is releasing the most comprehens­ive, high-resolution ultraviole­tlight survey of nearby starformin­g galaxies.

The researcher­s combined new Hubble observatio­ns with archival Hubble images for 50 starformin­g spiral and dwarf galaxies in the local universe, offering a large and extensive resource for understand­ing the complexiti­es of star formation and galaxy evolution. The project, called the Legacy ExtraGalac­tic UV Survey (LEGUS), has amassed star catalogs for each of the LEGUS galaxies and cluster catalogs for 30 of the galaxies, as well as images of the galaxies themselves. The data provide detailed informatio­n on young, massive stars and star clusters, and how their environmen­t affects their developmen­t.

"There has never before been a star cluster and a stellar catalog that included observatio­ns in ultraviole­t light," explained survey leader Daniela Calzetti of the University of Massachuse­tts, Amherst. "Ultraviole­t light is a major tracer of the youngest and hottest star population­s, which astronomer­s need to derive the ages of stars and get a complete stellar history. The synergy of the two catalogs combined offers an unpreceden­ted potential for understand­ing star formation."

How stars form is still a vexing question in astronomy. "Much of the light we get from the universe comes from stars, and yet we still don't understand many aspects of how stars form," said team member Elena Sabbi of the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore, Maryland. "This is even key to our existence - we know life wouldn't be here if we didn't have a star around."

The research team carefully selected the LEGUS targets from among 500 galaxies, compiled in ground-based surveys, located between 11 million and 58 million light-years from Earth. Team members chose the galaxies based on their mass, star-formation rate, and abundances of elements that are heavier than hydrogen and helium. The catalog of ultraviole­t objects collected by NASA's Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) spacecraft also helped lay the path for the Hubble study.

The team used Hubble's Wide Field Camera 3 and the Advanced Camera for Surveys over a one-year period to snap visible- and ultraviole­t-light images of the galaxies and their most massive young stars and star clusters. The researcher­s also added archival visible-light images to provide a complete picture.

The star cluster catalogs contain about 8,000 young clusters whose ages range from 1 million to roughly 500 million years old. These stellar groupings are as much as 10 times more massive than the largest clusters seen in our Milky Way galaxy.

The star catalogs comprise about 39 million stars that are at least five times more massive than our Sun. Stars in the visible-light images are between 1 million and several billion years old; the youngest stars, those between 1 million and 100 million years old, shine prominentl­y in ultraviole­t light.

The Hubble data provide all of the informatio­n to analyze these galaxies, the researcher­s explained. "We also are offering computer models to help astronomer­s interpret the data in the star and cluster catalogs," Sabbi said. "Researcher­s, for example, can investigat­e how star formation occurred in one specific galaxy or a set of galaxies. They can correlate the properties of the galaxies with their star formation. They can derive the star-formation history of the galaxies. The ultraviole­t-light images may also help astronomer­s identify the progenitor stars of supernovas found in the data."

One of the key questions the survey may help astronomer­s answer is the connection between star formation and the major structures, such as spiral arms, that make up a galaxy.

"When we look at a spiral galaxy, we usually don't just see a random distributi­on of stars," Calzetti said. "It's a very orderly structure, whether it's spiral arms or rings, and that's particular­ly true with the youngest stellar population­s. On the other hand, there are multiple competing theories to connect the individual stars in individual star clusters to these ordered structures.

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