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Gabriel Brammer downloaded data from the James Webb Space Telescope and translated each set of infrared data to red, green and blue visible spectra of light and combined them to produce this image. (Image credit: Gabriel Brammer / Twitter)
The image of the galaxy NGC 628 created by a scientist’s using data from the James Webb Space Telescope reveals a 'purple swirl' of galactic dust.
A stunning image
of the spiral galaxy NGC 628 taken by the James Webb Space Telescope looks like
something straight out of a science fiction movie and could help scientists
understand how dust behaves in galaxies.
The image was
shared on Twitter by Gabriel Brammer of the University of Copenhagen in
Denmark. According to the New Scientist, the image is a composite of three sets
of data captured by Webb at three different wavelengths. Brammer, who is not
part of the Webb team, downloaded the data and translated each set of infrared
data to red, green and blue visible spectra of light and combined them to
produce this image.
Let's just see what JWST observed yesterday...
— gbrammer (@gbrammer) July 18, 2022
Oh, good god. pic.twitter.com/8UQWi2zPlR
The galaxy has
been imaged in visible light in the past by other telescopes, including Hubble
and it even looks similar to the Milky Way when viewed from above the galactic
plane. Brammer told New Scientist that this image represents how the night sky
would look if our eyes could see mid-infrared wavelengths.
Let's just see what JWST observed yesterday...
— gbrammer (@gbrammer) July 18, 2022
Oh, good god. pic.twitter.com/8UQWi2zPlR
NGC 628 gets its
purple appearance in the image created by Brammer due to the composition of its
dust clouds, which are mostly made up of large molecules called polycyclic
aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH). Incidentally, PAH is a big component in the smoke
from cigarettes.
These molecules
only reflect specific wavelengths of light. When Brammer mapped the wavelength
data to red, green and blue, there was very little green. The combination of a
large amount of red and blue light gave the galaxy the purple colour that can
be seen in the image.
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