File:Hiding in the crowd (potw2407a).tiff

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Captions

Hundreds of thousands of stars are contained in this Picture of the Week, an infrared image of Sagittarius C, a region near the centre of the Milky Way.

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Description
English: Hundreds of thousands of stars are contained in this Picture of the Week, an infrared image of Sagittarius C, a region near the centre of the Milky Way. Taken with ESO’s Very Large Telescope (VLT) in the Chilean Atacama Desert, this image is helping astronomers unlock a stellar puzzle.The centre of the Milky Way is the most prolific star-forming region in the entire galaxy. However, astronomers have only found a fraction of the young stars they expected here: there is “fossil” evidence that many more stars were born in the recent past than the ones we actually see. This is because looking towards the centre of the galaxy is not an easy task: clouds of dust and gas block the light from the stars and obscure the view. Infrared instruments, such as the HAWK-I camera on the VLT, allow astronomers to peer through these clouds and reveal the starry landscape beyond.In a recent study, Francisco Nogueras Lara, an astronomer at ESO in Germany, analysed VLT data of Sagittarius C, a region whose chemical composition made it a promising candidate to host recently formed stars. And it delivered: he found that this region was much richer in young stars than other areas in the galactic centre. Looking to similar regions, now, is a promising lead to find the other missing young stars.
Date 12 February 2024 (upload date)
Source
This media was produced by the European Southern Observatory (ESO), under the identifier potw2407a

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Author ESO/F. Nogueras-Lara et al.
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Licensing[edit]

This media was created by the European Southern Observatory (ESO).
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current07:16, 12 February 2024Thumbnail for version as of 07:16, 12 February 20249,113 × 4,042 (210.8 MB)OptimusPrimeBot (talk | contribs)#Spacemedia - Upload of https://www.eso.org/public/archives/images/original/potw2407a.tif via Commons:Spacemedia

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