The Milky Way's Center
Creator: Cool Cosmos/IPAC
The center of our Milky Way Galaxy is located in the constellation of Sagittarius. In visible light the lion's share of stars are hidden behind thick clouds of dust. This obscuring dust becomes increasingly transparent at infrared wavelengths. This 2MASS image reveals multitudes of otherwise hidden stars, penetrating all the way to the central star cluster of the Galaxy.
This central core is about 25,000 light years away and is thought to harbor a supermassive black hole. The reddening of the stars here and along the Galactic Plane is due to scattering by the dust; it is the same process by which the sun appears to redden as it sets.
Image Use Policy: http://coolcosmos.ipac.caltech.edu/page/image_use_policy
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Image Details
- Image Type
- Observation
- Object Name
- Milky Way • Galactic Center
- Subject - Milky Way
- Star » Evolutionary Stage » Protostar
- Nebula » Type » Interstellar Medium
- Galaxy » Component » Center/Core
Color Mapping
Telescope | Spectral Band | Wavelength | |
---|---|---|---|
2MASS | Infrared | 1.3 µm | |
2MASS | Infrared | 1.7 µm | |
2MASS | Infrared | 2.2 µm | |