Great Canary Telescope Captures Deepest Image of a Galaxy
The Gran Telescopio Canarias (GTC), the world's largest
single-aperture optical telescope on the island of La Palma in Spain, has
captured an image of a galaxy which is 10 times deeper than any other obtained
from the ground.
GTC researchers managed the rare feat while observing a faint
halo of stars around the galaxy UGC0180, which is 500 million light years away
from the Earth.
The galaxy UGC00180 was chosen because it is quite similar to
our neighbour, the Andromeda Galaxy, and to other galaxies to which the
researchers have references.
They used the OSIRIS camera on the GTC, also known as the Great
Canary Telescope, which has a field big enough to cover a decent area of sky
around the galaxy, in order to explore its possible halo.
After 8.1 hours of exposure they could show that it does have a
weak halo composed of four thousand million stars, about the same number as
those in the Magellanic Clouds, which are satellite galaxies of the Milky Way.
With this measurement, recently published in Astrophysical
Journal, the existence of the stellar halos predicted by theoretical models is
confirmed, and it has become possible to study low surface brightness
phenomena.
As well as beating the previous surface brightness limit by a
factor of 10, the observation shows that it will be possible to explore the
universe not only to the same depth to which we can go using the conventional
technique of star counts, but also out to distances where this cannot be
achieved.
"The object of future research is to extend the study to
other types of galaxies, to see whether this way of understanding their
formation, predicted by the standard model, is correct or not," said study
lead author Ignacio Trujillo of the Instituto de Astrofisica de Canarias (IAC).
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