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MXPlank News Letter - 2021-11-27







Hubble celebrates International Year of Astronomy with new view of Milky Way






A never-before-seen view of the turbulent heart of our Milky Way galaxy provided by the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope and its companion Great Observatories (the Spitzer Space Telescope and the Chandra X-ray Observatory) is being unveiled on 10 Nov 2009. This event will commemorate the 400 years since Galileo first turned his telescope to the heavens in 1609.

Although best known for its visible-light images, Hubble also observes over a limited range of infrared light and this sweeping panorama is the sharpest infrared picture ever made of the galactic centre region. The composite image – made up of an image from each telescope – features the spectacle of stellar evolution: from vibrant regions of star birth, to young hot stars, to old cool stars, to seething remnants of stellar death called black holes.

This activity occurs against a fiery backdrop in the crowded, hostile environment of the galaxy's core, the centre of which is dominated by a supermassive black hole nearly four million times more massive than our Sun. Permeating the region is a diffuse, blue haze of X-ray light from gas that has been heated to millions of degrees by outflows from the supermassive black hole as well as by winds from massive stars and by stellar explosions. Infrared light reveals more than a hundred thousand stars along with glowing dust clouds that create complex structures including compact globules, long filaments, and finger-like 'pillars of creation,' where newborn stars are just beginning to break out of their dark, dusty cocoons.




Credit:
NASA/ESA and The Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA)








Hubble sees galaxies galore







Galaxies, galaxies everywhere - as far as the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope can see. This view of nearly 10,000 galaxies is the deepest visible-light image of the cosmos. Called the Hubble Ultra Deep Field, this galaxy-studded view represents a "deep" core sample of the universe, cutting across billions of light-years.

The snapshot includes galaxies of various ages, sizes, shapes, and colours. The smallest, reddest galaxies, about 100, may be among the most distant known, existing when the universe was just 800 million years old. The nearest galaxies - the larger, brighter, well-defined spirals and ellipticals - thrived about 1 billion years ago, when the cosmos was 13 billion years old.

In vibrant contrast to the rich harvest of classic spiral and elliptical galaxies, there is a zoo of oddball galaxies littering the field. Some look like toothpicks; others like links on a bracelet. A few appear to be interacting. These oddball galaxies chronicle a period when the universe was younger and more chaotic. Order and structure were just beginning to emerge.

The Ultra Deep Field observations, taken by the Advanced Camera for Surveys, represent a narrow, deep view of the cosmos. Peering into the Ultra Deep Field is like looking through a 2.5 metre-long soda straw.

In ground-based photographs, the patch of sky in which the galaxies reside (just one-tenth the diameter of the full Moon) is largely empty. Located in the constellation Fornax, the region is so empty that only a handful of stars within the Milky Way galaxy can be seen in the image.

In this image, blue and green correspond to colours that can be seen by the human eye, such as hot, young, blue stars and the glow of Sun-like stars in the disks of galaxies. Red represents near-infrared light, which is invisible to the human eye, such as the red glow of dust-enshrouded galaxies.

The image required 800 exposures taken over the course of 400 Hubble orbits around Earth. The total amount of exposure time was 11.3 days, taken between Sept. 24, 2003 and Jan. 16, 2004.







Credit:
NASA, ESA, and S. Beckwith (STScI) and the HUDF Team









Physicists exploit a quantum rule to create a new kind of crystal

Atoms can arrange themselves in regular configurations thanks to the Pauli exclusion principle

Scientists created a new type of crystal, based only on a quantum rule called the Pauli exclusion principle, by using lasers to confine lithium atoms (illustrated at center) to a region within a vacuum chamber. S. JOCHIM GROUP/HEIDELBERG UNIV.


Physicists have harnessed the aloofness of quantum particles to create a new type of crystal.

Some particles shun one another because they are forbidden to take on the same quantum state as their neighbors. Atoms can be so reluctant to overlap that they form a crystal-like arrangement even when they aren't exerting any forces on one another, physicists report May 8 at arXiv.org. Called a Pauli crystal, the configuration is the result of a quantum mechanical rule called the Pauli exclusion principle.

Scientists had previously predicted the existence of Pauli crystals, but no one had observed them until now. "It just teaches us how beautiful physics is," says quantum physicist Tilman Esslinger of ETH Zurich. The experiment reveals there are still new phenomena to be observed from a foundational principle taught in introductory physics classes. "If I wrote a textbook," Esslinger says, "I would put that [experiment] in."

Although the Pauli crystals themselves are based on known physics, the technique used to observe them could help scientists better understand certain mysterious states of matter, such as superconductors, materials that conduct electricity without resistance, or superfluids, which flow without friction.

Discovered by Austrian physicist Wolfgang Pauli in 1925, the Pauli exclusion principle forbids electrons within an atom from acquiring matching sets of quantum properties, such as energy and angular momentum (SN: 4/10/99). Physicists soon realized that the rule governs not only electrons but an entire class of particles called fermions, which in addition to electrons includes protons, neutrons and many types of atoms. As a result, fermions can repel one another without directly interacting. Whereas typical crystals form their regular arrangements thanks to electromagnetic interactions, a Pauli crystal forms only due to this repulsion.

"It's the most simple state of matter that you can imagine," says Selim Jochim of Heidelberg University in Germany.

Jochim and colleagues created their Pauli crystal out of lithium atoms, corralled by lasers into a two-dimensional region about a micrometer in radius. The researchers put groups of three or six atoms in that trap at a time. The atoms were too close together to directly image their positions to reveal any crystal-like structure. Instead, the team measured the atoms' momenta by watching where the particles traveled when released. After the experiment was repeated many times, the researchers found correlations, or patterns, in the atoms' momenta.

Flower-shaped patterns appear in the momenta of atoms due to the Pauli exclusion principle. These structures differ depending on the number of atoms involved: three (plotted on the left) or six (right)
Because position and momentum are closely related properties for these trapped particles, the relationship between the momenta also means that the atoms formed a regular spatial configuration akin to a crystal. Different flower-shaped configurations of the particles' momenta arose depending on the number of particles in the trap.

"You can really see this pattern," says Magdalena Zaluska-Kotur of the Institute of Physics of the Polish Academy of Sciences, part of a team of physicists that had previously predicted that such structures could be observed in this type of experiment