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New vista of Milky Way center unveiled

The mosaic of 88 Chandra pointings represents a freeze-frame of the spectacle of stellar evolution.
Provided by the Chandra X-ray Center, Cambridge, Massachusetts
Published: September 23, 2009
Center of the Milky Way
A deep new image of the center of the Milky Way by the Chandra X-ray Observatory.
Photo by NASA/CXC/UMass/D. Wang et al.
September 23, 2009
A dramatic new vista of the center of the Milky Way Galaxy from NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory exposes new levels of the complexity and intrigue in the galactic center. The mosaic of 88 Chandra pointings represents a freeze-frame of the spectacle of stellar evolution, from bright young stars to black holes, in a crowded, hostile environment dominated by a central, supermassive black hole.

Permeating the region is a diffuse haze of X-ray light from gas that has been heated to millions of degrees by winds from massive young stars, which appear to form more frequently here than elsewhere in the galaxy, explosions of dying stars, and outflows powered by the supermassive black hole known as Sagittarius A* (Sgr A*). Data from Chandra and other X-ray telescopes suggest that giant X-ray flares from this black hole occurred about 50 to 300 years earlier.

The area around Sgr A* also contains several mysterious X-ray filaments. Some of these likely represent huge magnetic structures interacting with streams of very energetic electrons produced by rapidly spinning neutron stars or perhaps by a gigantic analog of a solar flare.

Scattered throughout the region are thousands of point-like X-ray sources. These are produced by normal stars feeding material into the compact, dense remains of stars that have reached the end of their evolutionary trail — white dwarfs, neutron stars, and black holes.

Because X-rays penetrate the gas and dust that blocks optical light coming from the center of the galaxy, Chandra is a powerful tool for studying the galactic center. This image combines low energy X-rays (red), intermediate energy X-rays (green), and high energy X-rays (blue).
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