Updated
Updated · Space.com · Jul 7
Astronomers Push 2 Milky Way Arms 10% Farther Out, Measure 3,500-Light-Year Width
Updated
Updated · Space.com · Jul 7

Astronomers Push 2 Milky Way Arms 10% Farther Out, Measure 3,500-Light-Year Width

3 articles · Updated · Space.com · Jul 7

Summary

  • New X-ray measurements place the Milky Way’s Outer and Outer-Scutum-Centaurus spiral arms about 10% farther away than earlier estimates, suggesting the galaxy extends farther than thought.
  • Three gamma-ray bursts let researchers trace dust-scattered X-ray rings with Chandra and XMM-Newton, giving a geometry-based distance method that avoids uncertain assumptions about how the Milky Way rotates.
  • The same analysis put the most distant arm’s width at about 3,500 light-years, helping the team measure the arm’s full extent rather than a single dust cloud.
  • Those revisions could force updates to estimates of the Milky Way’s mass distribution, rotation and overall structure, though usable gamma-ray bursts are rare and only a handful have been found in 25 years.

Insights

With our galaxy's arms stretching further than known, must we rewrite our theories of how galaxies form and evolve?
Our map of the Milky Way is wrong. How does a bigger galaxy change the hunt for its vast, unseen dark matter?
A larger Milky Way challenges cosmic models. Could primordial black holes be the key to the galaxy's missing mass?