Tap / click on image to see more RealViewsTM
The glitter details are simulated in the artwork. No actual glitter will be used in the making of this product.Browse real foil products
CA$143.00
per poster
Firefly Sparkle Galaxy Cluster MACS J1423 Poster
Qty:
Choose Your Format
Size
Custom (152.40cm x 75.93cm)
Border
None
About Posters
Sold by
About This Design
The glitter details are simulated in the artwork. No actual glitter will be used in the making of this product.Browse real foil products
Firefly Sparkle Galaxy Cluster MACS J1423 Poster
Firefly Sparkle Galaxy and Companions in Galaxy Cluster MACS J1423 (NIRCam Image)
Credits: NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, Chris Willott (NRC-Canada), Lamiya Mowla (Wellesley College), Kartheik Iyer (Columbia)
For the first time, astronomers have identified a still-forming galaxy that weighs about the same as our Milky Way if we could “wind back the clock” to weigh our galaxy as it developed. The newly identified galaxy, the Firefly Sparkle, is in the process of assembling and forming stars, and existed about 600 million years after the big bang.
The galaxy is stretched and warped due to a natural effect known as gravitational lensing, which allowed researchers to glean far more information about its contents. (In some areas of Webb’s image, the galaxy is magnified over 40 times.)
While it took shape, the galaxy gleamed with star clusters in a range of infrared colours, which are scientifically meaningful. They indicate that the stars formed at different periods, not all at once.
“I didn’t think it would be possible to resolve a galaxy that existed so early in the universe into so many distinct components, let alone discover a Milky Way-mass galaxy in the process of forming,” said Lamiya Mowla, the lead author and an assistant professor at Wellesley College in Massachusetts.
Since the galaxy is stretched into a long line in Webb’s observations, the researchers were able to identify 10 distinct star clusters and study them individually, along with the cocoon of diffuse light from the additional, unresolved stars surrounding them. That’s not always possible for distant galaxies that aren’t lensed. Instead, in many cases researchers can only draw conclusions that apply to an entire galaxy. “Most of the other galaxies Webb has shown us aren’t magnified or stretched and we are not able to see the ‘building blocks’ separately. With Firefly Sparkle, we are witnessing a galaxy being assembled brick by brick,” Mowla explained.
There are two companion galaxies “hovering” close by, which may ultimately affect how this galaxy forms and builds mass over billions of years. Firefly Sparkle is only about 6,500 light-years away from its first companion, and 42,000 light-years from its second companion. Let’s compare these stats to objects that are closer to home: The Sun is about 26,000 light-years from the centre of our Milky Way galaxy, and the Milky Way is about 100,000 light-years across. Not only are these companions very close, the researchers also project that they are orbiting one another.
Each time one galaxy interacts with another, gas compresses, allowing new stars to form in clumps. “It has long been predicted that galaxies in the early universe form through successive interactions and mergers with other, tinier galaxies,” explained Yoshihisa Asada, a co-author and doctoral student at Kyoto University in Japan. “We might be witnessing this process in action.”
This trio of galaxies exists in the galaxy cluster MACS J1423, which was observed by the Hubble Space Telescope in its Cluster Lensing And Supernova survey with Hubble (CLASH) program. Hubble was the first to image this galaxy, now known as the Firefly Sparkle. Webb was able to resolve seven additional star clusters, the light emitted by stars outside the clusters, and identify two companion galaxies, which enhanced the team’s research.
Mowla picked out the Firefly Sparkle galaxy while closely examining Webb’s CAnadian NIRISS Unbiased Cluster Survey (CANUCS), which includes near-infrared images from NIRCam (Near-Infrared Camera) and spectra from the microshutter array aboard NIRSpec (Near-Infrared Spectrograph). She was drawn to its gleaming star clusters, because sparkly objects typically indicate things that are extremely clumpy and complicated. Since the galaxy looks like a “sparkle” or swarm of lightning bugs on a warm summer night, the team nicknamed it the Firefly Sparkle galaxy.
https://webbtelescope.org/contents/media/images/2024/116/01J4A3WP1TRQ8V49R82TDS164E?
Customer Reviews
4.8 out of 5 stars rating14.3K Total Reviews
14,291 Reviews
Reviews for similar products
5 out of 5 stars rating
By C S.July 26, 2023 • Verified Purchase
Print, Size: 20.32cm x 25.40cm, Media: Value Poster Paper (Semi-Gloss)
Zazzle Reviewer Program
My Bible verse postcard, turned out excellent. I love it and have it already framed. It was so reasonably priced for something done so well. Thank you to Zazzle and the artist! I thought it looked exactly like what I ordered. Perfect.
4 out of 5 stars rating
By Lee P.December 25, 2021 • Verified Purchase
Print, Size: 58.42cm x 87.63cm, Media: Value Poster Paper (Semi-Gloss)
Zazzle Reviewer Program
Poster is printed clearly, good quality . Inclusive of many prints .
The shipping was the problem. Box was flimsy and item got bent.. only suggestion would have been to put in a canister or mark fragile. Printing was exactly as shown
5 out of 5 stars rating
By R.January 28, 2021 • Verified Purchase
Print, Size: 91.44cm x 60.96cm, Media: Value Poster Paper (Semi-Gloss)
Zazzle Reviewer Program
I am a fan of Ravens and needed to have a poster of my favourite bird. The image quality is sharp.
Tags
Other Info
Product ID: 256248524005440103
Designed on 2024-12-15, 10:16 PM
Rating: G
Recently Viewed Items