Learning how interstellar dust turns into stars is a major challenge. But the AKARI satellite, an infrared observatory created by the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, could become a breakthrough tool in these studies. Launched in February of this year, AKARI is engaged in an infrared All Sky Survey, with spectacular early results from the Large Magellanic Cloud. The far-infrared image shown below shows that clouds of dust are found throughout this satellite galaxy of the Milky Way.

The LMC in far infrared

Image: This false-colour view of the Large Magellanic Cloud is a composite of images taken by AKARI at far-infrared wavelengths (60, 90 and 140 microns). The Large Magellanic Cloud is a neighbour galaxy to the Milky Way. Interstellar clouds in which new stars are forming are distributed over the entire galaxy. The bright region in the bottom-left is known as the ‘Tarantula Nebula’ and is a productive factory of stars. Credit: JAXA.

Infrared is ideal for these studies because stars tend to form within clouds of dusty interstellar gas, their light not visible at optical wavelengths. But as they grow, they heat the dust around them and that produces infrared radiation that AKARI can detect. Learning how dust is distributed in galaxies helps us understand how stars like our Sun came into being, and the Large Magellanic Cloud, being relatively close (160,000 light years), makes an ideal laboratory for these observations.

Centauri Dreams‘ note: Speaking of celestial views, as we have recently in these pages, I used to marvel at what an optical view of our Milky Way must be like from the LMC (although further study shows it might not be as spectacular as I had once imagined). Galaxies are, in fact, rather hard to see without resorting to tricks like CCD time exposures, as planet-hunter Greg Laughlin (UC-Santa Cruz) once pointed out:

Indeed, the great Andromeda Galaxy, M31, subtends an angle larger than the full Moon in the sky, and it is literally almost directly overhead right now (9:36 PM, Dec 3, latitude 36.97 deg N). The storms from earlier this week have blown through. The sky sparkles with brilliant clarity. Yet when I step outside and look up, I can’t see the Andromeda Galaxy at all. It’s too faint. In a 1:10,000,000,000,000 scale model of M31, the stars are like fine grains of sand separated by miles. Our Galaxy, the Andromeda Galaxy, and the Sombrero Galaxy are all essentially just empty space. To zeroth, to first, to second approximation, a galaxy is nothing at all.

On the other hand, if you’ve ever needed to re-awaken a sense of awe about the age and scale of the cosmos, the Large Magellanic Cloud serves quite well. Itself a galaxy of 10 billion stars, the LMC is thought to be the remnant of a barred spiral galaxy disrupted by the Milky Way. Ponder, too, that our galaxy may be headed for disruption and perhaps incorporation into the Andromeda galaxy, which itself was involved in a collision with dwarf galaxy Messier 32 (M32) more than 200 million years ago. Pondering galactic collisions works wonders with my own long-term perspective, even if they’re hard to see with the naked eye!