Astrophysicists map the Milky Way's four spiral arms
Washington, Jan 6 (ANI): A team of astrophysicists has developed the first complete map of the Milky Way galaxy's four spiral arms.
The new map was developed by Iowa State University's Martin Pohl, Peter Englmaier of the University of Zurich in Switzerland and Nicolai Bissantz of Ruhr-University in Bochum, Germany.
As the sun and other stars revolve around the center of the Milky Way, researchers cannot see the spiral arms directly, but have to rely on indirect evidence to find them.
In the visible light, the Milky Way appears as an irregular, densely populated strip of stars. Dark clouds of dust obscure the galaxy's central region; so it cannot be observed in visible light.
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Cosmic Background Explorer satellite was able to map the Milky Way in infrared light using an instrument called the Diffuse IR Background Experiment.
The infrared light makes the dust clouds almost fully transparent.
Englmaier and Bissantz used the infrared data from the satellite to develop a kinematic model of gas flow in the inner galaxy.
Pohl used the model to reconstruct the distribution of molecular gas in the galaxy, and that led to the researchers' map of the galaxy's spiral arms.
The map shows that the inner part of the Milky Way has two prominent, symmetric spiral arms, which extend into the outer galaxy where they branch into four spiral arms.
"For the first time, these arms are mapped over the entire Milky Way," said Pohl, an Iowa State associate professor of physics and astronomy.
"The branching of two of the arms may explain why previous studies, using mainly the inner or mainly the outer galaxy, have found conflicting numbers of spiral arms," he added.
In addition to the two main spiral arms in the inner galaxy, two weaker arms exist. These arms end about 10,000 light-years from the galaxy's center.
One of these arms has been known for a long time, but has always been a mystery because of its large deviation from circular motion.
The new model explains the deviation as a result of alternations to its orbit caused by the bar's gravitational pull.
The other, symmetric arm on the far side of the galaxy was recently found in gas data.
The discovery of this second arm was a great relief for Englmaier:
"Finally, it is clear that our model assumption of symmetry was correct and the inner galaxy is indeed quite symmetric in structure," he said. (ANI)
-
LPG Crunch: Karnataka Brings New SOPs, Makes PNG Registration Mandatory for Businesses -
Hyderabad Gold Silver Rate Today, 30 March 2026: Check Fresh 24K, 22K, 18K Gold And Silver Prices In City -
Opinion Poll For Kerala Assembly Election 2026: Ldf Strength In Kannur And Kasaragod -
Tamil Nadu Polls 2026: Vijay Reveals Rs 645 Crore Assets, Rs 266 Crore in Banks; Know All His Declaration -
Mumbai Metro Line 9 Set for April 3 Launch, Dahisar-Mira Bhayandar to Get Direct Boost -
Trump Hints At Breakthrough With Iran Amid War Escalation, Calls Recent Move A ‘Sign Of Respect’ -
Rahul Arunoday Banerjee Autopsy Report: Actor Was Underwater For Over An Hour, Sand Found In Lungs -
West Bengal Assembly elections: Election Commission transfers heads of 173 police stations -
Delhi Weather Brings Relief: IMD Issues Yellow Alert For Rain, Thunderstorms And Gusty Winds; Check Forecast -
Tamil Nadu Elections 2026: Vijay Files Nomination Same Day as MK Stalin, Sets Up Symbolic Political Face-Off -
Too Close To Call? 57 Key Seats Could Decide West Bengal Election 2026 As TMC And BJP Gear Up For Tight Battle -
Kim Jong Un Oversees New Solid-Fuel Missile Engine Test, Claims Capability To Reach US Mainland












Click it and Unblock the Notifications