Largest-ever map of Milky Way’s center reveals ‘rare and enigmatic’ structures in new ALMA observations


Scientists have unveiled the largest, most detailed map ever of the chaotic gas clouds at the center of our galaxy. The resulting image may take years to analyze, but promises to help unravel the mysteries of how the earliest stars lived and died soon after Big Bang.

The new observations, taken with the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) radio telescope in Chile, cover 650 light-years of structures around the Milky Way’s central black holedeep in the constellation Sagittarius. This region is known as the Central Molecular Zone (CMZ) for its many clouds of dense molecular gas and is thought to mirror the compact and chaotic conditions of the earliest galaxies in the universe.

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