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Credit & Copyright: ESA,   
Planck HFI & LFI Consortia   
   
   
Explanation:
Seen from our edge-on perspective,   
the Milky Way Galaxy sprawls   
across the middle of this   
false-color, all sky view.   
   
The expansive microwave map is based on 1 year's worth   
of data from instruments onboard the sky-surveying   
Planck spacecraft.   
   
Remarkably, the bright stripe of gas and dust clouds   
along the galactic plane   
and the galaxy's enormous arcing structures seen at   
microwave energies   
are hundreds or thousands of light-years away, while   
the mottled regions at the top and bottom represent the Cosmic   
Microwave Background (CMB) radiation,   
some 13.7 billion   
light-years   
distant.   
   
Left over from   
the Big Bang,   
fluctuations in the CMB reflect the origins   
of structure in the evolving universe.   
   
Analyzing the microwave data, Planck scientists plan to   
separate the contributions of the Milky Way and CMB   
radiation.   
   
The work will ferret out the characteristics   
of the CMB across the entire sky   
and glean information about   
the make up of our Milky Way Galaxy.   
   
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NASA Web Site Statements, Warnings, and Disclaimers
NASA Official: Jay Norris. Specific rights apply.
A service of: LHEA at NASA / GSFC
& Michigan Tech. U.
Based on Astronomy Picture
Of the Day
Publications with keywords: microwave - cosmic microwave background radiation - Milky Way
Publications with words: microwave - cosmic microwave background radiation - Milky Way
See also:
