Xorte logo

News Markets Groups

USA | Europe | Asia | World| Stocks | Commodities



Add a new RSS channel

 
 


Keywords

2024-11-25 18:16:42| Engadget

The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) is back to once again paint a glorious portrait of the heavens. This time, the powerful telescope was set loose on the Sombrero galaxy, otherwise called Messier 104 or M104. The end result? A gorgeous image that reframes our understanding of that particular region of space. Upon closer inspection using the JWSTs mid-infrared view, the Sombrero galaxy no longer truly resembles its namesake. It looks more like an archery target, complete with a bullseye in the center. That bullseye? Its actually a supermassive black hole. The sharp resolution offered by Webbs Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI) finally gives us a detailed glimpse of the outer ring, showing intricate clumps of dust. Previous images, captured via visible light, made the area appear smooth like a blanket. The JWST presents a more complicated picture. The clumpy nature of the dust indicates carbon-containing molecules called polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, which typically illustrate the presence of young star-forming regions. This is likely the case here, though the Sombrero galaxy is thought to not be a hotbed of star formation. Scientists believe that the galaxy produces less than a single solar mass per year. The Milky Way galaxy, where youre most likely reading this from, creates roughly two solar masses per year. Messier 82, otherwise called the Cigar galaxy, is responsible for around 20 solar masses per year. The MIRI image also shows a whole bunch of galaxies littering the background of space, all with different shapes and colors. Astronomers are busy studying these background galaxies to determine how far away they are. As for the Sombrero galaxy, its 30 million light-years from Earth deep in the Virgo constellation. A galaxy too far for us to ever even hope of traveling to? Typical independent Virgo. Of course, this is just the latest glorious image provided to us by the JWST. It recently found the most distant galaxy ever observed and gave us a new perspective on everyones favorite ice giant, Uranus.This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/science/space/nasa-just-released-a-stunning-new-image-of-the-sombrero-galaxy-captured-by-the-jwst-171642105.html?src=rss


Category: Marketing and Advertising

 

Latest from this category

13.12WWE Saturday Night's Main Event: How to watch John Cena's final match for free
12.12Amazon pulls its bad AI video recaps after Fallout fallout
12.12IKEA's new wireless charger is as cute as it is practical
12.12Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 devs dropped a big update after sweeping The Game Awards
12.12Google Translate is now better at translating slang terms and idioms using AI
12.12Doom studio id Software forms 'wall-to-wall' union, with 165 employees voting in favor
12.12AI Update, December 12, 2025: AI News and Views From the Past Week
12.12Reddit sues Australia over underage social media ban
Marketing and Advertising »

All news

13.12SBI and PPFAS Mutual Fund among 5 AMCs that had over Rs 10,000 crore cash in their portfolio in November
13.12SBI and PPFAS Mutual Fund among 5 AMCs that had over Rs 10,000 crore cash in their portfolio in November
13.12ICICI Pru AMC to Corona Remedies: GMPs suggest up to 63% returns for 15 IPO listings next week
13.12Bond market steady as RBI rate cut, record-low inflation and liquidity measures shape the fixed income landscape
13.12Mind Over Money| Salsa, Long Walks & Pickleball: The unusual stress hacks of Deepak Shenoy, Capitalmind CEO
13.12Political landscape heats up in Bangladesh ahead of elections
13.12Wall Street ends lower; fears of AI bubble and inflation send investors away
13.12Pakistans ties with Nordic states touch new low as Norway envoy served demarche
More »
Privacy policy . Copyright . Contact form .