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Tuesday, March 14, 2023

SPACE CADETS / HEY, YOU, THE SPEC ON THE FAR LEFT

If humankind didn’t already feel insignificant in the cosmos, this image made available by the National Science Foundation's NOIRLab in January 2023 proves we are truly specs in a vastness beyond comprehension. The photo above shows the galactic plane of the Milky Way galaxy. Astronomers have captured more than 3 billion stars and galaxies in one of the biggest sky surveys ever, focusing on the Southern Hemisphere sky. (Image by NSF/AURA, M. Zamani & D. de Martin via AP) 

GUEST BLOG / By Marcia Dunn, Reporter, Associated Press
-- A galactic photo shoot has captured more than 3 billion stars and galaxies in one of the biggest sky surveys ever. A dark-energy camera on a telescope in Chile made the observations over two years, focusing on the Southern Hemisphere sky. 

The National Science Foundation’s NOIRLab released the survey results this week. Shown in remarkable detail, most of these Milky Way objects are stars. The count also includes small, distant galaxies that may have been mistaken as individual stars. It’s like taking a group shot and being able to distinguish not only each individual, but the color of their shirt, said lead researcher Andrew Saydjari, a doctoral candidate in physics at Harvard University. “Despite many hours of staring at images containing tens of thousands of stars, I am not sure my mind has wrapped around the magnitude of these numbers,” Saydjari said in an email. 

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