Bending Gravity, Researchers Capture Star-Birthing Region 10 Billion Light Years Away

Wednesday, March 24, 2010 - 09:21 in Astronomy & Space

Using a little astrophysical magic and the Atacama Pathfinder Experiment Telescope in northern Chile, astronomers at Durham University in England captured the best view yet of individual star nurseries in a galaxy a full 10 billion light-years from Earth. And all they had to do was bend a little light. The star birth region above -- SMMJ2135-0102, for those of you keeping cosmic score -- is about 300 light-years across and contains concentrations of stars 100 times greater than similar regions in our own galaxy. Follow up snapshots taken with the Submillimeter Array in Hawaii further sharpened the view, revealing four star-forming factories in the galaxy. But while images of the far cosmos are nearly always visually appealing, this one is especially intriguing because of the way it was captured. This faraway galaxy normally couldn't be seen in such dramatic detail, but as chance would have it a huge cluster of nearer...

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