The Hamilton Spectator

Mysteries at the Magnetic Heart of the Milky Way

- By DENNIS OVERBYE

“The nation that controls magnetism will control the universe.” So maintained Dick Tracy, the fictional detective in the comic strip by Chester Gould, in 1962.

But does magnetism control the universe, too?

About seven stars are born each year in the Milky Way, our home galaxy. They come from dust and to dust they eventually return. Now, a celestial image, an Impression­istic swirl of color in the center of the Milky Way, represents a first step toward understand­ing the role of those magnetic fields in the cycle of stellar death and rebirth.

The image was produced by David Chuss, a physicist at Villanova University in Pennsylvan­ia, and an internatio­nal team of astronomer­s. The project is known as FIREPLACE, for Far-InfraRed Polarimetr­ic Large Area CMZ Exploratio­n. The team’s map reveals previously invisible details in a stretch of the central Milky Way 500 light-years wide.

The colors represent different temperatur­es of interstell­ar dust: Green indicates cool, dense dust; pink indicates warmer dust. Threaded through these hues are lines showing the directions of magnetic force in the clouds. The yellow streaks are jets of hot ionized gas, which emits radio waves. The jets were first recorded two years ago by the MeerKAT radio telescope in South Africa. Every new generation of eyes sees a new version of our galaxy.

To map the galaxy’s magnetic field lines, Dr. Chuss and his colleagues flew at 13,700 meters aboard the Stratosphe­ric Observator­y for Infrared Astronomy, or SOFIA, a Boeing 747 outfitted for astronomy. A special spectrogra­ph measured the direction of polarizati­on of the infrared light emanating from the dust, revealing the directions of the magnetic fields point by point.

The center of the Milky Way is barely noticeable to the right of center in the map, just below a small blob that resembles a sideways figure eight. At the middle of the dusty blob is a monster black hole, around which the entire galaxy rotates like a carousel.

“The next step is to figure out what this all means,” Dr. Chuss said. Embedded in this map could be clues to some of nature’s most complex processes, including how stars, the sources of all light and life in the universe, come to be.

“It will provide the ability for new theories to be tested,” Dr. Chuss said, “and guide the developmen­t of the next generation of astronomic­al exploratio­n.”

 ?? VILLANOVA UNIVERSITY/PARÉ, KARPOVICH, CHUSS (PI) ?? This map, painted in infrared wavelength­s, shows details in a stretch of our galaxy 500 light-years wide. Colors represent different temperatur­es of dust.
VILLANOVA UNIVERSITY/PARÉ, KARPOVICH, CHUSS (PI) This map, painted in infrared wavelength­s, shows details in a stretch of our galaxy 500 light-years wide. Colors represent different temperatur­es of dust.

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