HERMES tagged posts

What Ingredients went into the Galactic Blender to create the Milky Way?

A simulation of a collision between the young Milky Way and a smaller galaxy. Credit: Dr Tobias Buck (AIP/MPIA/NYU)

Our galaxy is a giant ‘smoothie’ of blended stars and gas but a new study tells us where the components came from. In its early days, the Milky Way was like a giant smoothie, as if galaxies consisting of billions of stars, and an enormous amount of gas had been thrown together into a gigantic blender. But a new study picks apart this mixture by analysing individual stars to identify which originated inside the galaxy and which began life outside.

“Although the Milky Way is our home galaxy, we still do not understand how it formed and evolved,” says researcher Sven Buder from the ARC Centre of Excellence for All Sky Astrophysics in 3 Dimensions (ASTRO 3D) and the Au...

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Stellar mystery deepens: Large Group of Stars found Dying Prematurely

Globular cluster M4. Credit: NOAO/AURA/NSF

Globular cluster M4. Credit: NOAO/AURA/NSF

Using recent advancements in Australian telescope tech, a Monash Uni team has made an unexpected discovery that a large group of stars are dying prematurely, challenging our accepted view of stellar evolution revealing that large numbers of helium burning stars are dying prematurely in the M4 globular cluster. M4 is one of the closest and brightest globular clusters, and has already been very well studied. “Globular clusters are some of the oldest objects in the Universe. Although we have some ideas for what is going on in them, every time we look carefully we find something unexpected” said Professor Lattanzio.

Researchers used a new instrument called a high efficiency and resolution multi-element spectrograph (HERMES)...

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