Highest telescope reveals wonders of the universe
A stunning image of a spiral shell of cosmic dust and gas around a
red giant star was captured by astronomers using the world's highest
terrestrial telescope.
The ALMA telescope is currently being completed on the remote
Chajnantor plateau in the Chilean Andes.
 Located 5,100 metres above sea level, it has an array of 66 antennas
each the size of a two-storey suburban house and can detect radiation in
the millimetre-submillimetre wavelength range, between infrared and
radio waves, which means that it can see structures that are invisible
to the Hubble telescope.
Until this image was captured, astronomers had no idea that this red
giant star, R Sculptoris, possessed a spiral-shaped halo of material,
which indicates the presence of an unseen companion star.
"This is the first time we've ever seen a spiral of material coming
out from a star, together with a surrounding shell," said Matthias
Maercker, of the European Southern Observatory and University of Bonn in
Germany.
Red giants evolve towards the end of a star's life and are major
contributors to the dust and gas that form the raw materials of newly
formed stars.
The ALMA telescope will be opened next year. Dr Maercker said it is
already providing insights into some of the most mysterious regions of
the Universe. "We always expected ALMA to provide us with a new view of
the Universe, but to be discovering unexpected new things already with
one of the first sets of observations is truly exciting," he said.
- The Independent
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