These new images of a small part of the sky, which
may go unrecognized, the survey Ultra Vista and reveal more than 200,000
galaxies. It's just a part of a large collection of images of all the
polls VISTA, fully processed, now THAT is making available to astronomers
around the world. Ultra Vista is a hidden treasure that is being used to
study distant galaxies in the early universe as well as many other scientific
projects.
The ESO VISTA telescope has observed the same piece of sky repeatedly to slowly
build up the faint light from distant galaxies. In all, create the image;
have combined over six thousand different exposures with a total effective
exposure time of 55 hours, taken through five different filters. This
image of the survey is Ultra Vista infrared vision of heaven deepest ever
obtained its size.
The largest survey telescope in the world and, so far, the most powerful
infrared surveys. Since the beginning of its operation in 2009 most of its
observing time is dedicated to public polls, some covering large parts of the
southern skies and other focused on smaller parts.
The survey has been dedicated to Ultra Vista COSMOS field, some of the most
apparently empty sky that has been studied in depth using other telescopes,
including Hubble Space Telescope (NASA / ESA). Ultra Vista is by far the
deepest of the six polls VISTA and reveals the faintest objects in the area.
Are currently processing data from surveys of VISTA - a total of more than 6
terabytes of images-in data analysis centers around Europe, returning to the
file data from ESO to make them available to astronomers around the world?
At first glance, the image of Ultra Vista not seem relevant, are a few bright
stars and scattered, some weaker. But in reality, most of these fainter
objects are not stars in the Milky Way, but very distant galaxies, each
containing one of them, billions of stars. Extending the full screen, and
getting closer, reveals numerous galaxies, the image recorded in total, more
than 200,000 galaxies.
Expanding the universe shifts the light from distant objects toward longer
wavelengths. For the starlight from distant galaxies we can see, this
means that most of the light falls in the infrared part of the spectrum when it
comes to Earth. VISTA, being a wide-field infrared telescope, is an ideal
instrument to discover distant galaxies in the early universe. Studying
galaxies in the redshifted light at increasing distances, astronomers can also
analyze how they formed and how galaxies evolve over cosmic history.
Closer inspection of the image reveals many objects scattered among the
galaxies reddish cream color, larger-these are, for the most part, very remote
galaxies seen when the Universe was only a small fraction of its present age. Initial
studies Ultra Vista images combined with images from other telescopes have
revealed the presence of numerous galaxies that can be seen when the universe
was less than a billion years (some even earlier times).
Although this image is Ultra Vista deepest infrared image size exists, the
comments continue. The end result, coming in a few years, will be
significantly deeper.
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