New Gaia release: cluster cores and unforeseen science

The globular cluster Omega Centauri seen by Gaia, combining the data from Gaia Data Release 3 with Gaia’s Focused Product Release, showing how Omega Centauri is truly bursting with stars.
Credit: ESA/Gaia/DPAC. Acknowledgement: Stefan Jordan, Katja Weingrill, Alexey Mints, Tineke Roegiers

ESA’s Gaia provides many new and improved insights into our galaxy and beyond with the release of five new data products. Among other findings, the mission reveals half a million new and faint stars in a massive cluster. The new Gaia stars revealed in Omega Centauri live in one of the most crowded regions in the sky.

Gaia’s third data release contained data on over 1.8 billion stars, building a pretty complete view of the Milky Way and beyond. However, there remained gaps in our mapping. In areas of the sky that were especially densely packed with stars, Gaia’s normal observation mode reached its limitations, leaving these comparatively unexplored – and overlooking stars shining less brightly than their many neighbours.

Globular clusters are a key example of this. These clusters are some of the oldest objects in the universe, making them especially valuable to scientists looking at our cosmic past. Unfortunately, their bright cores, chock-full of stars, can overwhelm telescopes attempting to get a clear view. As such, they remain missing jigsaw pieces in our maps of the universe.

To patch the gaps in our maps, Gaia selected Omega Centauri, the largest globular cluster that can be seen from Earth and a great example of a ‘typical’ cluster. Rather than just focusing on individual stars, as it typically would, Gaia enabled a special observation mode recording two-dimensional images of the Sky Mapper instrument.

“In Omega Centauri, we discovered over half a million new stars Gaia hadn’t seen before – from just one cluster!” says lead author Dr. Katja Weingrill PI of the Gaia project at the Leibniz Institute for Astrophysics Potsdam (AIP).

“It’s not just patching up holes in our mapping, although this is valuable in itself,” adds co-author and Gaia Collaboration member Dr. Alexey Mints, also of the AIP. “Our data allowed us to detect stars that are too close together to be properly measured in Gaia’s regular pipeline. With the new data we can study the cluster’s structure, how the constituent stars are distributed, how they’re moving, and more, creating a complete large-scale map of Omega Centauri. It’s using Gaia to its full potential – we’ve deployed this amazing cosmic tool at maximum power.”

This finding not only meets but actually exceeds Gaia’s planned potential, since the Sky Mapper images were originally intended for calibration purposes only. The team used an observing mode designed to ensure that all of Gaia’s instruments are running smoothly. “We didn’t expect to ever use it for science, which makes this result even more exciting,” adds Katja Weingrill.

Gaia is currently exploring eight more regions in this way, with the results to be included in Gaia Data Release 4. These data will help astronomers to truly understand what is happening within these cosmic building blocks, a crucial step for scientists aiming to confirm the age of our galaxy, locate its centre, figure out whether it has gone through any past collisions, verify how stars change through their lifetimes, constrain our models of galactic evolution, and ultimately infer the possible age of the universe itself.

In the new release, Gaia also identifies over 380 possible gravitational lenses, improves the accuracy of the orbits of more than 150,000 asteroids within the solar system, maps the disk of the Milky Way by tracing weak signals seen in starlight, and characterizes the dynamics of 10,000 pulsating and binary red giant stars.

This data is freely accessible as of today and can be downloaded directly from the AIP Gaia mirror https://gaia.aip.de, as the AIP is an official Gaia Partner Data Centre.

Wissenschaftliche Ansprechpartner:

Dr. Katja Weingrill, +49 331 7499 671, kweingrill@aip.de
Dr. Alexey Mints, +49 331 7499 515, amints@aip.de

Originalpublikation:

Gaia Focused Product Release: Sources from Service Interface Function image analysis – half a million new sources in omega Centauri. Gaia Collaboration, K. Weingrill , et al. Astronomy & Astrophysics
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202347203

Weitere Informationen:

https://www.aip.de/en/news/gaia-focused-product-release/ News on the AIP website with more images
https://www.esa.int/Science_Exploration/Space_Science/Gaia/New_Gaia_release_reve… ESA press release
https://www.esa.int/Science_Exploration/Space_Science/Gaia ESA Gaia website
https://www.cosmos.esa.int/web/gaia/data-access#PartnerDataCentres Gaia data access
https://gaia.aip.de Gaia data centre at AIP

Media Contact

Dr. Janine Fohlmeister Presse- und Öffentlichkeitsarbeit
Leibniz-Institut für Astrophysik Potsdam

All latest news from the category: Physics and Astronomy

This area deals with the fundamental laws and building blocks of nature and how they interact, the properties and the behavior of matter, and research into space and time and their structures.

innovations-report provides in-depth reports and articles on subjects such as astrophysics, laser technologies, nuclear, quantum, particle and solid-state physics, nanotechnologies, planetary research and findings (Mars, Venus) and developments related to the Hubble Telescope.

Back to home

Comments (0)

Write a comment

Newest articles

Logic with light

Introducing diffraction casting, optical-based parallel computing. Increasingly complex applications such as artificial intelligence require ever more powerful and power-hungry computers to run. Optical computing is a proposed solution to increase…

A chip-based tractor beam for biological particles

The tiny device uses a tightly focused beam of light to capture and manipulate cells. MIT researchers have developed a miniature, chip-based “tractor beam,” like the one that captures the…

A new era of solar observation

International team produces global maps of coronal magnetic field. For the first time, scientists have taken near-daily measurements of the Sun’s global coronal magnetic field, a region of the Sun…

Partners & Sponsors