Barred Spirals

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Barred Spirals
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The Milky Way bar is more than just candy. It’s a key part of our home galaxy. That’s because the Milky Way is a barred spiral. Its beautiful spiral arms extend from the ends of a thick bar of stars that spans the galaxy’s middle.

And the Milky Way isn’t alone. In today’s universe, up to two-thirds of all spiral galaxies appear to have bars.

Simulations reveal that bars should be a natural development for spiral galaxies. Gravitational disturbances can cause stars in a spiral to follow elongated orbits around the galaxy’s center. That “stretches out” the center, forming the bar.

Gas can be funneled into the bar, where it can give birth to new stars. But most of the stars in a bar are old and faint, so the bar looks yellow. The spiral arms that wrap off its ends, on the other hand, contain a lot of young, vigorous stars, so the arms look bright blue.

Barred spirals can take many forms. Some have just one arm extending from each end of the bar, so they look like a twirler’s baton with ribbons streaming off the tips. Others have more spiral arms, so they look like pinwheels.

That includes the Milky Way. Because we’re inside the galaxy, we can’t easily see its overall structure. So the bar was discovered only recently. And there’s still some uncertainty about its size. But it certainly extends across many thousands of light-years — a sweet collection of stars in the heart of the Milky Way.

More about spiral galaxies tomorrow.

 

Script by Damond Benningfield

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