Astronomy - USA (2022-06)

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THE MILKY WAY’S HEARTSTRINGS


Nearly a thousand filaments lie at the center of our galaxy.


Mysterious threads glow
brightly in this view of the
Milky Way Galaxy, shown in
radio waves. The composite is a
mosaic of 20 images taken over
200 hours by the South African
Radio Astronomy Observatory’s
MeerKAT radio telescope array,
and was published Feb. 2 in The
Astrophysical Journal Letters.
The strange strands, which
were first discovered 35 years
ago, are thought to be generated
by cosmic-ray electrons moving
at nearly the speed of light
and interacting with magnetic
fields. Most similar features
elsewhere in the universe have a
source of acceleration, such as a

FIRST LIGHT
A month after its
December launch,
NASA’s Imaging X-ray
Polarimeter Explorer
(IXPE) returned its first
scientific image: the
supernova remnant
Cassiopeia A.

FULL-BODY SHOT
ESA and NASA’s
Solar Orbiter spotted
the largest solar
prominence ever
imaged in the same
frame as the Sun’s
full disk. The eruption
extended over 2 million
miles (3.5 million km)
into space.

LAST SUPPER
Astronomers have
made the first direct
observation of a white
dwarf consuming
planetary debris.
NASA’s Chandra X-ray
Observatory saw the
rocky objects rain
down on the stellar
remnant late last year.

HOT
BYTES

SNAPSHOT


QUANTUM GRAVITY
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black hole. But these high-
energy filaments lack a
direct source. Researchers
say that the turbulence

and chaos at the Milky
Way’s center could gener-
ate the strands; another
possibility for their origin

is a compact, powerful
source that astronomers
have not yet identified.
— SAMANTHA HILL
Free download pdf