NASA’s Swift satellite makes best-ever ultraviolet portrait of Andromeda galaxy

Washington, September 17 (ANI): NASA’s Swift satellite has acquired the highest-resolution view of a neighboring spiral galaxy ever attained in the ultraviolet.

The galaxy, known as M31 in the constellation Andromeda, is the largest and closest spiral galaxy to our own.

“Swift reveals about 20,000 ultraviolet sources in M31, especially hot, young stars and dense star clusters,” said Stefan Immler, a research scientist on the Swift team at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland.

“Of particular importance is that we have covered the galaxy in three ultraviolet filters. That will let us study M31′s star-formation processes in much greater detail than previously possible,” he added.

M31, also known as the Andromeda Galaxy, is more than 220,000 light-years across and lies 2.5 million light-years away.

On a clear, dark night, the galaxy is faintly visible as a misty patch to the naked eye.

Between May 25 and July 26, 2008, Swift’s Ultraviolet/Optical Telescope (UVOT) acquired 330 images of M31 at wavelengths of 192.8, 224.6, and 260 nanometers.

The images represent a total exposure time of 24 hours.

The task of assembling the resulting 85 gigabytes of images fell to Erin Grand, an undergraduate student at the University of Maryland at College Park who worked with Immler as an intern this summer.

“After ten weeks of processing that immense amount of data, I’m extremely proud of this new view of M31,” she said.

Several features are immediately apparent in the new mosaic.

The first is the striking difference between the galaxy’s central bulge and its spiral arms.

“The bulge is smoother and redder because it’s full of older and cooler stars,” Immler explained. “Very few new stars form here because most of the materials needed to make them have been depleted,” he added.

Dense clusters of hot, young, blue stars sparkle beyond the central bulge.

M31′s disk and spiral arms contain most of the gas and dust needed to produce new generations of stars.

Star clusters are especially plentiful in an enormous ring about 150,000 light-years across.

“Swift is surveying nearby galaxies like M31 so astronomers can better understand star- formation conditions and relate them to conditions in the distant galaxies where we see gamma-ray bursts occurring,” said Neil Gehrels, the mission’s principal investigator at NASA Goddard. (ANI)

University of Maryland students to screen porn film off campus

Washington, Apr 4 (ANI): Students at the University of Maryland at College Park, who were upset after the General Assembly forced school officials to cancel the screening of pornographic film “Pirates II: Stagnetti’s Revenge”, have decided to screen the movie off campus.

The students, who want to exercise their right to free speech, are also planning on hosting speakers from the faculty as well as groups like the American Civil Liberties Union to discuss free speech.

The screening had previously been organized by the university’s student union on March 28 as part of a nationwide discussion on pornography, but later had to be scrapped after lawmakers threatened to cut the school off from 424 million dollars in state funding if they showed the movie.

“There is a lot of anger in the way the situation has played out,” the Washington Times quoted Kenton Stalder, a junior English major and a member of the student government, as saying.

“A question we want to point out is: Does education have to start and stop at the classroom door?” he said.

Stalder said that he and other members of his campus political party, the Student Power Party, were organizing the unofficial screening.

Other student leaders described the controversy as “an embarrassment” for the legislature.

“It’s absolutely immature politics. It makes the General Assembly look like an embarrassment. How can an institution of 45,000 people be threatened by a porn film?” student government Vice-President Joanna Calabrese, a junior environmental policy major, said.

Christopher Ruth, a spokesman for the film’s distributor, Digital Playground, said that the company was “shocked” when it learnt that College Park had cancelled the screening.

“The government has no place to tell adults what they’re supposed to do. They [the legislators] had essentially committed extortion so the university would do what they want,” Ruth added. (ANI)