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Contact: Steve
Roy Nancy
Neal Megan
Watzke
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August 9, 2001 -- RELEASE: 01-161 ASTRONOMERS GO BEHIND THE MILKY WAY TO SOLVE X-RAY MYSTERY
Through layers of gas and dust that stretch for more than 30,000 light-years,
astronomers using NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory have taken a long,
hard look at the plane of the Milky Way galaxy and found that its X-ray
glow comes from hot and diffuse gas. The findings, published in the August
10 issue of the journal Science, help to settle a long-standing mystery
about the source of the X-ray emission from the "The point sources we saw in the galactic plane were actually active galaxies with bright cores millions of light-years behind our galaxy," said Ebisawa. "The number of these sources is consistent with the expected number of extragalactic sources in the background sky. We saw few additional point sources within our galaxy." The
observation marks the deepest X-ray look at the so-called "zone of
avoidance" -- a region of space behind which no optical observation
has ever been taken because thick dust and gas in the spiral arms of the
Milky Way galaxy block out visible radiation. Infrared, radio and X-rays,
however, can penetrate this dust and gas. Detection of diffuse X-rays
emanating from the galactic plane, what we call the "Milky Gas this hot would escape the gravitational confines of the Milky Way galaxy under normal ircumstances. The fact that it still lingers within the galactic plane is the next mystery to solve. One possibility, suggested by Ebisawa, is that hot plasma may be confined to the Milky Way by magnetic fields. The Chandra observation, conducted in February 2000, lasted 28 hours. The team observed what was known to be a "blank" region of the galactic plane where the Japanese X-ray satellite ASCA had previously observed but found no individual X-ray sources. The
team also discovered 36 bright distant galaxies lurking in the background
of this section of the galactic plane, while the foreground was devoid
of stars or other individual objects emitting X-rays. Chandra, and now
the European XMM-Newton satellite, are at long last beginning to collect
light Participating in the Chandra observation and Science article are Yoshitomo Maeda of Pennsylvania State University, University Park; Hidehiro Kaneda of the Institute of Space and Astronautical Science in Japan; and Shigeo Yamauchi of Iwate University in Japan. Chandra
observed the galactic plane with its Advanced CCD Imaging Spectrometer
(ACIS) instrument, which was developed for NASA by Pennsylvania State
University, University Park, and Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
Cambridge. NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, AL, manages
the Images
associated with this release are available at: http://chandra.harvard.edu
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