A picture of the first field observed in the H-ATLAS survey, made by combining the images made with the SPIRE camera at 250, 350 and 500 microns.
The colours in the image are not real but have been used to represent the different infrared wavelengths.
The faint blue whisps at the top of the image show dust in our own Galaxy and the bright object just above the centre of the picture is a 'Bok globule', a dense cloud of gas and dust, also in our Galaxy, in which a small star may be forming.
The other objects in the picture are all galaxies, at distances up to 12 billion light-years.
The image shows that the survey is detecting objects in our celestial ‘backyard’ and also other, further ones that we are seeing as they were not long after the Big Bang.
Credits: ESA/ATLAS Consortium
Thursday, May 6, 2010
ESA Herschel Images: Our Celestial Backyard
Labels:
Big Bang,
Bok globule,
camera,
Celestial Backyard,
ESA Herschel,
Galaxy,
H-Atlas survey,
images,
Infrared,
SPIRE,
wavelengths
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