用户名/邮箱
登录密码
验证码
看不清?换一张
您好,欢迎访问! [ 登录 | 注册 ]
您的位置:首页 - 最新资讯
Telescope data helps solve century-old cosmic puzzle
2025-03-17 00:00:00.0     黎明报-最新     原网页

        Join our Whatsapp channel

       Chinese and United States astronomers have created the first three-dimensional map of the properties of interstellar dust in the Milky Way, using data from China’s Large Sky Area Multi-Object Fiber Spectroscopy Telescope and European Space Agency’s Gaia space observatory.

       Published as a cover story in Science on Friday, this cosmic atlas solves a decade-old challenge in astronomy by revealing how interstellar dust dims and reddens starlight across the galaxy. The breakthrough is poised to revolutionise studies of star formation, exoplanets and potentially the origins of life.

       ADVERTISEMENT

       Next

       Stay

       Playback speed

       1x Normal

       Quality

       Auto

       Back

       360p

       240p

       144p

       Auto

       Back

       0.25x

       0.5x

       1x Normal

       1.5x

       2x

       /

       Skip

       Ads by

       “Interstellar dust — tiny solid particles scattered across the galaxy — acts like a cosmic fog, absorbing and scattering starlight, which is called extinction,” said Zhang Xiangyu, a Chinese doctoral student at the Max Planck Institute in Germany.

       For decades, astronomers had to correct observations using oversimplified models, assuming homogeneous dust behaved uniformly.

       “But dust properties vary across regions. Using a one-size-fits-all extinction curve was like navigating with a flawed GPS,” said Zhang, who conducted the study with his mentor, Gregory M. Green.

       The team combined two million stellar spectra from LAMOST with positional and spectroscopic data from the European Gaia space observatory, creating a dynamic 3D map that tracks how dust extinction changes by location and wavelength.

       Published in Dawn, March 17th, 2025

       


标签:综合
关键词: interstellar dust     extinction     Zhang     starlight     astronomers     space    
滚动新闻