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2MASS Infrared Stars
The 2MASS survey uses near-infrared light at wavelengths longer than that of visible light. At these wavelengths, clouds of dust that obscure our view of more distant stars in our Milky Way galaxy become increasingly transparent. As a result we can see all the way to the very center of the galaxy, showing its overall structure far more clearly than is possible in visible light. This image is centered on the core of our own Milky Way galaxy, toward the constellation of Sagittarius. The reddish stars seemingly hovering in the middle of the Milky Way's disc -- many of them never observed before. These stars trace the densest dust clouds in our galaxy. The two faint smudges seen in the lower right quadrant are our neighboring galaxies, the Small and Large Magellanic Clouds. The false color image is constructed by mapping the three wavelengths of near-infrared light into the three bands of visible light: 1.2 microns to blue, 1.6 microns to green, and 2.2 microns to red.
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1200x600 pixels JPEG (390 K)
Image Credit: 2MASS/J. Carpenter, T. H. Jarrett, & R. Hurt This image made use of Montage, funded by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Earth Science Technology Office, Computational Technnologies Project, under Cooperative Agreement Number NCC5-626 between NASA and the California Institute of Technology
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