Sunday 9 September 2012

In search of the Galactic Plane


Almost everyone knows that the galaxy our Solar System is located in is called the Milky Way but a lot of people don't realize that you can actually see the Milky Way from the comfort of our Earth-bound back gardens. Well, obviously not the whole of the Milky Way galaxy - you'd have to be well outside of the galaxy, in a starship or some alien observatory in the Andromeda Galaxy, to do that. What we can actually see is the Galactic Plane of the Milky Way - the plane in which the majority of our galaxy's mass lies. 

Every star you see in the night sky is part of the Milky Way but you can also see a hazy band of 'milky' white light (hence the name of our galaxy) some 30 degrees wide arcing across the sky.   The Galaxy appears like a band (as seen in the photograph below from the European Organisation for Astronomical Research in the Southern Hemisphere in Chile) because that's what you see when a disk-shaped structure is viewed from inside. And you don't even need a telescope to see it - your trusty Mark 1 eyeballs are the best optical equipment to use.




However, if, like me, you are living in or near a city such as Cambridge or even a suburb such as Longstanton, the chances are it will be almost impossible to see. The light pollution from from street lights, buildings, houses and vehicles will completely wash out any of the Milky Way's white 'haze' (not to mention a good number of normally visible stars). Bright moonlight would make it even more difficult to see and if it's cloudy, well, you might as well go inside and watch the 'The Sky At Night' on the BBC instead.

To illustrate, the picture below was taken outide my house last night, with a bright half moon, some hazy cloud and the scorching lights of the A14 and a guided bus station blazing away just a few miles away - not to mention a b*$$&y street light just in front of my house. Looking westward at this time of the year, I should be able to see the Galactic Plane cut across the constellation Cygnus and Cepheus. However, as you can see the photograph below, all you'd probably be able to see in these very usual conditions would be the bright line of stars at the bottom that form the cross Cygnus and a handful of Cepheus' stars at the top.



In better seeing conditions, with no moonlight or cloud, such as in the picture below, you'd probably be able to resolve many more stars - but the light pollution would ensure that you'd still be hard-pressed to see any hint of the Galactic Plane.



However, the Galactic Plane IS there! I'd taken 36 exposures of that same scene in my first photograph above and 'stacked' them using astronomical imaging processing software so that I'd be able to squeeze every tiny photon of light captured in each exposure (the technique is explained in my earlier blog 'Let there be Light!'). The resulting image is shown below:




You can probably now just about make out a band of hazy stars concentrated in the middle of the picture. You might also see some dark 'clouds' within that band. Dark regions within the band correspond to areas where light from distant stars is blocked by interstellar dust.

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