|
Mysterious Cluster of Stars Discovered
Near Milky Way
__Sloan Digital Sky Survey Finds Mysterious
New Milky Way Companion, a Building Block of the Milky Way__
October 20, 2004 — Most of the stars in our
Milky Way galaxy lie in a very flat, pinwheel-shaped disk. Although
this disk is prominent in images of galaxies similar to the Milky
Way, there is also a very diffuse spherical "halo" of
stars surrounding and enclosing the disks of such galaxies. Recent
discoveries have shown that this outer halo of the Milky Way is
probably composed of small companion galaxies ripped to shreds as
they orbited the Milky Way. A discovery announced today by the Sloan
Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) reveals a clump of stars unlike any seen
before. The findings may shed light on how the Milky Way's stellar
halo formed.
This clump of newly discovered stars, called SDSSJ1049+5103
or Willman 1, is so faint that it could only be found as a slight
increase in the number of faint stars in a small region of the sky.
"We discovered this object in a search for extremely dim companion
galaxies to the Milky Way," explains Beth Willman of New
York University's Center for
Cosmology and Particle Physics. "However,
it is 200 times less luminous than any galaxy previously seen."
•Beth Willman, New York University, Center for Cosmology
and Particle Physics, 4 Washington Place, New York, NY 10003
•Michael Blanton, New York University
•Andrew A. West, Department of Astronomy, University of
Washington, Box 351580, Seattle, WA, 98185
•Julianne J. Dalcanton, University of Washington
•David W. Hogg, New York University
•Donald P. Schneider, Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics,
Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802
•Brian Yanny, Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, PO
Box 500, Batavia, IL 60510
•Jon Brinkmann, Apache
Point Observatory, PO Box 59, Sunspot,
NM 88349
IMAGE:
An image of the newly discovered stars is on the web site of the
Sloan Digital Sky Survey at:
http://www.sdss.org/news/releases/20041020.companion.html
CONTACTS AT PENN STATE:
Donald Schneider, dps@astro.psu.edu,
(+1) 814-863-9554
Barbara Kennedy (PIO), science@psu.edu,
(+1) 814-863-4682
OTHER CONTACTS:
Beth Willman, New York University (212) 992-8792, beth.willman@nyu.edu
Julianne Dalcanton, University of Washington (206) 685-2155,
jd@astro.washington.edu
Michael Strauss, Scientific Spokesperson, The Sloan Digital Sky
Survey (SDSS), (609) 258-3808, strauss@astro.princeton.edu
Gary S. Ruderman, The Sloan Digital Sky Survey Public Information
Officer, (312) 320-4794, sdsspio@aol.com
James Devitt, Office of Public Affairs, New York University, (212)
998-6808, james.devitt@nyu.edu
[ SDSS ]
|