Satellite Galaxies of Our Milky Way Above ESO’s Telescopes
Despite being small compared to the Milky Way, the Magellanic Clouds still contain billions of stars. The Large Magellanic Cloud, in the bottom-right of the image, has a diameter of 14,000 light-years, and the Small Magellanic Cloud in the top-center is 7,000 light-years across. At distances of about 160,000 light-years and 200,000 light-years respectively these satellite galaxies are much closer to the Milky Way than our nearest major galaxy, Andromeda, 2.5 million light-years away, making them some of our closest neighbors.
The faint red emission in the sky is called airglow, and its light naturally emitted by atoms and molecules high up in the atmosphere, oxygen in this case.
These ghostly galaxies can only be seen in the southern hemisphere, in skies that are unpolluted by light from cities. This is one of the reasons that European Southern Observatory (ESO) operates the VLT in the remote Chilean Atacama Desert—so that we can study such beguiling objects as the Magellanic Clouds.
Credit: European Southern Observatory (ESO)/M. Zamani
Release Date: April 18, 2022
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