Looking Towards the Galactic Center of our Milky Way Galaxy

Galacticcenterview
spitzer_ssc2008-10b1-gc June 3, 2008

Creator: Spitzer Space Telescope, Pasadena, CA, USA

This digram shows our vantage point within the Milky Way galaxy looking toward our own galactic center. At a distance of around 27,000 light years, we must peer through much of the disk of our galaxy before seeing into its core.

Like early explorers mapping the continents of our globe, astronomers are busy charting the spiral structure of our galaxy, the Milky Way. Using infrared images from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope, scientists have discovered that the Milky Way's elegant spiral structure is dominated by just two arms wrapping off the ends of a central bar of stars. Previously, our galaxy was thought to possess four major arms.

This annotated artist's concept illustrates the new view of the Milky Way, along with other findings presented at the 212th American Astronomical Society meeting in St. Louis, Mo. The galaxy's two major arms (Scutum-Centaurus and Perseus) can be seen attached to the ends of a thick central bar, while the two now-demoted minor arms (Norma and Sagittarius) are less distinct and located between the major arms. The major arms consist of the highest densities of both young and old stars; the minor arms are primarily filled with gas and pockets of star-forming activity.

The artist's concept also includes a new spiral arm, called the "Far-3 kiloparsec arm," discovered via a radio-telescope survey of gas in the Milky Way. This arm is shorter than the two major arms and lies along the bar of the galaxy.

Our sun lies near a small, partial arm called the Orion Arm, or Orion Spur, located between the Sagittarius and Perseus arms.

Image Use Policy: Public Domain

View Options

Image Details

Image Type
Artwork
Object Name
Milky Way
Subject - Milky Way
Galaxy » Type » Spiral
Galaxy » Type » Barred
Galaxy » Activity » Normal
Galaxy » Component » Spiral Arm