ROSAT Explores the X-Ray Sky
NASA Technical Rep.:
Sherri
Calvo.
Specific rights apply.
Launched in 1990, the orbiting
ROSAT observatory explored the Universe by
viewing the entire
sky in x-rays - photons with about 1,000 times
more energy than visible light.
This ROSAT survey produced the sharpest, most sensitive
image of the x-ray sky to date.
The all-sky image is shown with
the plane of our Milky Way Galaxy running
horizontally through the center. Both x-ray brightness and relative energy
are represented with red, green, and blue colors indicating three
x-ray energy ranges (from lowest to highest).
Bright x-ray spots near the galactic plane are within our own Milky Way.
The brightest region (right of center) is toward the Vela Pulsar and the
Puppis supernova remnant.
Bright sources beyond our Galaxy are also
apparent, notably the Virgo cluster of galaxies
(near top right) and
the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC).
The LMC is easy to find here as
several of the black stripes (blank areas caused by missing data) seem
to converge on its position (lower right).
Over large areas of the sky a general diffuse background of
x-rays dominates. Hot gas in our own Galaxy provides
much of this background and gives rise to the grand looping structures
visible in the direction of the galactic center (image center).
Unresolved extragalactic sources also add to this background, particularly
above and below the plane.
Despite the x-ray sky's exotic appearance,
a very familiar feature is visible -
the gas and dust clouds which line the plane of our galaxy
absorb x-rays as well
as optical light and produce
the dark bands running through the
galactic center.