The Whole Universe In One Photo

Huffington Post UK  |  By Posted: 3/04/2012 12:46 Updated: 19/04/2012 08:24

Nasa has unveiled an astounding new image of our galactic neighbourhood - a new star atlas for the entire universe.

The atlas includes a catalogue of the entire infrared sky, over half a billion stars, galaxies and more captured by the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) mission.

Edward Wright, WISE principal investigator at UCLA, said: "Today, WISE delivers the fruit of 14 years of effort to the astronomical community." Wright began working on the WISE mission in 1998.

Made up of more than 2.7 million images taken at four infrared wavelengths of light, the new image captures everything from nearby asteroids to distant galaxies.

CLICK "FULLSCREEN" BELOW TO SEE THE WHOLE IMAGE

The WISE catalogue of images covers the entire sky, and this immense image, shown below at the largest size our system can handle, took more than a decade of work.

WISE has discovered the coolest stars called Y-dwarfs, found more than 90 percent of the largest near-Earth asteroids, the first known "Trojan" asteroid to share the same orbital path around the sun as Earth and echoes of infrared light surrounding an exploded star.

Roc Cutri, who leads the WISE data processing and archiving effort at the Infrared and Processing Analysis Center at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, said: "With the release of the all-sky catalog and atlas, WISE joins the pantheon of great sky surveys that have led to many remarkable discoveries about the universe. It will be exciting and rewarding to see the innovative ways the science and educational communities will use WISE in their studies now that they have the data at their fingertips."

  • Mapping The Universe

    NASA recently unveiled a new atlas and catalogue of the entire infrared sky, which includes more than a half billion stars, galaxies and other objects captured by the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) mission. It is comprised of more than 2.7 million images taken at four infrared wavelengths of light, capturing everything from nearby asteroids to distant galaxies.

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Nasa has unveiled an astounding new image of our galactic neighbourhood - a new star atlas for the entire universe. The atlas includes a catalogue of the entire infrared sky, over half a billion s...
Nasa has unveiled an astounding new image of our galactic neighbourhood - a new star atlas for the entire universe. The atlas includes a catalogue of the entire infrared sky, over half a billion s...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Richie Tipsy Kariuki
Reality...it's optional
02:35 AM on 02/18/2013
I couldn't find Wally :-(

(Waldo for my U.S. peeps!)
09:04 PM on 04/22/2012
Absolutely amazing
12:33 AM on 04/07/2012
Wait, you mean we could be under someone's fingernail?
06:55 PM on 04/06/2012
Just a three dimensional guy in two dimensional hologram projection.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
hairydodger
03:04 PM on 04/06/2012
Where is "fullscreen" to click on? HP is getting worse and worse. Who are the new hires at HP? FAIL......
04:17 PM on 04/15/2012
Uh, look at the large image above. At the bottom are several "button", play, FULLSCREEN zooom & etc. Press the FULLSCREEN button.
02:19 PM on 04/06/2012
I don't understand how the entire universe, or at least most of the matter, exists in what looks like a thin disk.
04:35 PM on 04/06/2012
You're loooking at it like photograph. It is made up of a ton if images and it is what the night sky looks like wrapped around the earth.
04:56 AM on 04/07/2012
It's just a picture of the sky -- which, in some sense, is the "whole universe", though that's really hype.

The most prominent feature in the night sky is the Milky Way galaxy, which we live in. The Milky Way is plenty big by terrestrial standards (!), but is very tiny compared to the observable universe, which contains many billions of comparably sized galaxies.
10:31 AM on 07/02/2012
and in any order this is only under one of the many lenses of sight. not to mention any of the other 4 senses that we know as "mankind" or Human Existence... as WE know it. if anything this only shows that there is a light at the end of the tunnel but there is also another light at the end of the next tunnel and so forth... i am sorry for posting.
10:33 AM on 04/06/2012
If you could travel at say, twice the speed of light. Could you go to the nearest star have a seat and a cup of coffee and watch yourself get there
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William A
Oh Lord, save me from your followers!
12:42 PM on 04/06/2012
No, it's a paradox. At lightspeed you would have infinite mass. In other words, more mass than exists in the universe. The only way to cross such vast distances quickly is by "cheating" quantum physics, and manipulating spacetime.
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Crisdean Wulver
We've got our priorities screwed up.
06:45 PM on 04/06/2012
At least according to our current understanding on the laws of physics.

But apparently *information* can travel faster than light. In fact, it can travel instantaneously. I'm talking about Bell's theorem.

I'm not sure I understood it even twenty years ago when I first heard about it. And I understand it even less now, because I haven't read about it in a long time. But the way I remember it, if a subatomic particle is split, and one half flies off in one direction and the other flies of in the opposite direction, if someone had a ping pong paddle an swatted one particle in a way that started it spinning----like a ping pong player puts spin on a ping pong ball----the other half of the particle on the other side of the universe would spontaneously start spinning in the opposite direction.

They are on opposite sides of the universe, yet there is some informational connection between them. What is it?

Whatever it is doesn't seem to be bothered by vast distances.

I'm not sure I've stated it properly. But if I have, then we have a lot left to learn about spacetime.
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
08:59 AM on 04/08/2012
Speed is limited at the speed of light, but as you get close to that speed time dilation makes travel time arbitrarily short according to the traveller. The energy required is huge and unfeasible though.
09:54 AM on 04/06/2012
So we have managed to produce a picture of the infinite universe? I've wondered what infinity looked like, really really big, but this picture is actually quite small to be able to get it all in.
The things we can do with technology, eh?
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William A
Oh Lord, save me from your followers!
12:38 PM on 04/06/2012
Yeah, it's silly. Pure PR jig. The universe is expanding faster than the speed of light, and much faster than our ability to document it... seing as how we're billions and billions of lightyears from the end, and keep going further away.
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Crisdean Wulver
We've got our priorities screwed up.
06:46 PM on 04/06/2012
So spacetime can expand faster than the speed of light?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rafael Perez
09:16 AM on 04/06/2012
So if that is the entire universe, then what is beyond that?

Or is the universe expanding like a bubble? Growing from the center and getting bigger and bigger?

Still, what is beyond the edges of the universe? If nothing exists beyond the universe then "nothing" itself is something, just something that is empty or has a 0 value.

If the universe is infinite, then it would not make sense to say that it is expanding, because expansion means growing in size, and that means that before growing, there was a predetermined size that was not infinite.

GRRRR MY BRAIN EXPLODED.
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William A
Oh Lord, save me from your followers!
12:45 PM on 04/06/2012
It's an illustration of what we've been able to see of the universe so far.

As for what exists outside of something... that's still anybody's guess. Could be solar systems exist in galaxies in universes like universes exist in some other greater spacetime we can't see or comprehend. There are supposed to be at least 10 dimensions, afterall. But that's pure speculation on my part. And let's not bring religion into this ;)
10:47 AM on 07/02/2012
all religion is... is what you believe. some religions have one deity and some non but in the same they all reflect an explanation of life. believe in what you believe and listen to others beliefs. sometimes you find missing stones you have been looking for in your own personal "religion".
12:50 PM on 04/06/2012
The expansion just means that stuff is getting farther apart -- this is very well observed by now. Whether the universe is infinite or not has no bearing on whether it's expanding or not.

Hope that helps!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
OD4U
If its OK for one then its OK for all.
10:44 PM on 05/26/2012
OK, layman speaking, but infinite surely means endless? What you are suggesting is infinity with finite parameters. Additionally, if 10 or more dimensions do co-exist then is it not more likely that they exist within the same universe as we know it, but at a different bandwidth? (Told you I was a layman at this)
08:58 AM on 04/06/2012
I don't think my pc screen is giving me the full effect. I'm not feeling it!
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Crisdean Wulver
We've got our priorities screwed up.
06:46 PM on 04/06/2012
:-D
08:29 AM on 04/06/2012
the visible universe..saw a documentary about how the universe could be a lot bigger but the light is so distant it would never reach..or something like that
09:03 AM on 04/06/2012
The expansion of the universe is accelerating, and will accelerate beyond the speed of light (its kind of complicated to explain, but shortly after the big bang the universe expanded much faster than the speed of light). When we talk about the Universe, we generally mean the observable universe, which is a sphere of approximately 93 billion light years. Some parts of the universe will continue to become visible in the future, but past a certain point the space in between us and said galaxies will expand at a rate faster than the speed of light.
12:52 PM on 04/06/2012
You might very much appreciate Davis and Lineweaver's paper "Expanding confusion", which takes on some of these issues.

http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0310808
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DanaLane
Internet Rambos Don't Impress Me
06:38 PM on 04/10/2012
ROFL! Dood, we can't reach the closest star. You are too funny!
07:04 AM on 04/06/2012
This was taken in a studio at Universal.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
digitus impudicus
Appropriate gestures for the marionettes
05:53 AM on 04/06/2012
If that's a picture of the entire universe, where was it taken from?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
oldstuff
Your micro-bio is empty!
08:59 AM on 04/06/2012
just a couple of steps back.
12:52 PM on 04/06/2012
It's actually an image of the whole sky.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
thomas colopy
04:33 AM on 04/06/2012
What? This isn't the universe, this is clearly a GALAXY.... Ours perhaps? I am sorry If I am wrong but this isnt a picture showing the universe full of Galaxies. And if it were correct the Big Bang theory would be total BS.

I am guessing it is our Milky Way.
Oh course if I am wrong and an expert can correct me than I am more than willing to listen.
Again HP......................
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Donald Kinge
05:17 AM on 04/06/2012
"the entire infrared sky, which includes more than a half billion stars, galaxies and other objects"
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WilliamTheV
I drank what? -Socrates
08:04 AM on 04/06/2012
The bright band in the middle is our galaxy, which is an unavoidable result of our being inside it, however, the survey is an infrared panorama of the entire sky, including objects beyond our galaxy. Essentially, the entire visible universe.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
OD4U
If its OK for one then its OK for all.
10:48 PM on 05/26/2012
The bright band in the middle is our galaxy. Does that mean are in the centre of the universe or, is the reason because of the photo's vantage point?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RillyKewl
Fighting the War on Women
04:27 AM on 04/06/2012
I think I can see my house.
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Seafarer61
I am the one and done. A drive-thru truth teller.
05:22 AM on 04/06/2012
That's not a house, it's the President's ego.
05:46 AM on 04/06/2012
" Seafarer61, what is your problem? "
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PhineasGage730
06:29 AM on 04/06/2012
WOW!

That was so lame. And I mean it, no matter who you said that about it really was one of the unfunniest things I've read.