Credit: NASA, ESA, J. Dalcanton, B.F. Williams, and L.C. Johnson (Univ. of Washington), the PHAT team, and R. Gendler
The largest NASA Hubble Space Telescope image ever assembled, this sweeping bird's-eye view of a portion of the Andromeda galaxy (M31) is the sharpest large composite image ever taken of our galactic next-door neighbor. Though the galaxy is over 2 million light-years away, the Hubble telescope is powerful enough to resolve individual stars in the 61,000-light-year-long stretch of the galaxy's pancake-shaped disk seen here. It's like photographing a beach and resolving individual grains of sand. And, Hubble astronomers see lots of stars in this sweeping view -- over 100 million, with some of them in thousands of star clusters seen embedded in the disk.
Hubble traces densely packed stars extending from the innermost hub of the galaxy seen at left. Moving out from this central galactic bulge, the panorama sweeps from the
galaxy's central bulge across lanes of stars and dust to the sparser outer disk. Large groups of young blue stars indicate the locations of star clusters and star-forming regions. The stars bunch up in the blue ring-like feature toward the right side of the image. The dark silhouettes trace out complex dust structures. Underlying the entire
galaxy is a smooth distribution of cooler red stars that trace Andromeda's evolution over billions of years.
Because the galaxy is only 2.5 million light-years from Earth, it is a much bigger target in the sky than the myriad galaxies Hubble routinely photographs that are billions of
light-years away. This means that the Hubble survey consists of 7,398 exposures taken over 411 individual pointings and assembled together into a mosaic image. The edges of the mosaic form a sawtooth pattern created by stitching together the multiple fields.
The panorama is the product of the Panchromatic Hubble Andromeda Treasury (PHAT) program. Images were obtained from viewing the galaxy in near-ultraviolet, visible, and near-infrared wavelengths, using the Advanced Camera for Surveys and the Wide Field Camera 3 aboard Hubble. This view shows the galaxy in its natural visible-light color, as
photographed with the Advanced Camera for Surveys in red and blue filters July 2010
through October 2013.