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编辑: 更新后的图,高分辨版本. | |
ID: 54725 · 评分:0 · 评分: / 回复 引用 | |
As a side note: light from the stars in the Sagittarius Stream took between 50,000 and 130,000 YEARS for the light to reach us (depending on where along the stream you look)! That is, these stars are about that many light years away from us! | |
ID: 54727 · 评分:0 · 评分: / 回复 引用 | |
THANK YOU VERY MUCH!!! | |
ID: 54728 · 评分:0 · 评分: / 回复 引用 | |
Thanks for posting this. It's always interesting to see the actuall scientific results of all that crunching, it gives that "yeah, it was worth it" feeling. | |
ID: 54732 · 评分:0 · 评分: / 回复 引用 | |
Sounds good, thx :) | |
ID: 54733 · 评分:0 · 评分: / 回复 引用 | |
After looking half an hour on the map i got it. The b gave me trouble. But the closer the Sagittarius Tidal Debris Stream is, the higher you have to look up. It means it is above the galactic plane :) | |
ID: 54738 · 评分:0 · 评分: / 回复 引用 | |
Excellent! It is interesting there is a star "hot spot" that is present on (I presume) the leading edge (direction of rotation) of the stream. What is interesting is that the hot spot is not on a the neutral axis of the stream, that is, it is to the outside. Is that because centripetal accelerations are high and pushing them towards the outside of the center line? I would expect the inside of the stream to have a high star density as it would be experiencing the same centripetal accelerations and shove all the stars together. Also, the stream tip should be artificially compacted as the leading edge of the stream is thinned out and elongated (much like a comet and tail). | |
ID: 54740 · 评分:0 · 评分: / 回复 引用 | |
Awesome! | |
ID: 54751 · 评分:0 · 评分: / 回复 引用 | |
Amazing! | |
ID: 54765 · 评分:0 · 评分: / 回复 引用 | |
Excellent! It is interesting there is a star "hot spot" that is present on (I presume) the leading edge (direction of rotation) of the stream. What is interesting is that the hot spot is not on a the neutral axis of the stream, that is, it is to the outside. Is that because centripetal accelerations are high and pushing them towards the outside of the center line? I would expect the inside of the stream to have a high star density as it would be experiencing the same centripetal accelerations and shove all the stars together. Also, the stream tip should be artificially compacted as the leading edge of the stream is thinned out and elongated (much like a comet and tail). The leading edge of the tidal stream is actually on the left side of the plot - the density increases (redder) as you approach the dwarf galaxy core. This is only the part of the stream that we have data for - so it cuts off on the right edge pretty noticeably. The tidal stream actually wraps all the way around the galaxy, with "tails" in front and behind the Sagittarius dwarf galaxy - similar to a comet, if the comet also had a tail sticking out in front of it. This happens due to the "tidal" effects of our Milky Way Galaxy's gravitational pull. James Bullock has some nice images of simulations that demonstrate this; I'll try to find more in the near future. | |
ID: 54777 · 评分:0 · 评分: / 回复 引用 | |