Zone of Avoidance

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The Milky Way creates a Zone of Avoidance for local observers
The Milky Way creates a Zone of Avoidance for local observers

The Zone of Avoidance (ZOA) is the area of the night sky that is obscured by our own galaxy, the Milky Way.

Contents

[edit] Term

The ZOA was originally called the "Zone of Few Nebulae" in an 1878 paper by English astronomer Richard Proctor that referred to the distribution of "nebulae" in Sir John Herschel's General Catalogue of Nebulae.[1]

[edit] Background

Dust and stars in the plane of the Milky Way (the galactic plane) obstruct our view of around 20% of the extragalactic sky at optical wavelengths. As a result, optical galaxy catalogues are usually very incomplete close to the galactic plane. This area of incompleteness is known as the Zone of Avoidance: other galaxies seem to avoid this area (almost certainly a selection effect)[citation needed] and historically astronomers have avoided doing extragalactic astronomy in this area as there are easier targets elsewhere.[citation needed]

[edit] Modern developments

In more recent years, many projects have attempted to bridge the gap in our knowledge caused by the Zone of Avoidance. The dust and gas in the Milky Way cause extinction at optical wavelengths, and foreground stars can be confused with background galaxies. However, the effect of extinction drops at longer wavelengths, such as the infrared, and the Milky Way is effectively transparent at radio wavelengths. Surveys in the infrared, such as IRAS and 2MASS, have given us a more complete picture of the extragalatic sky. Indeed, two very large nearby galaxies, Maffei 1 and Maffei 2, were discovered in the Zone of Avoidance by Paolo Maffei by their infrared emission in 1968. Even so, approximately 10% of the sky remains difficult to survey as extragalactic objects can be confused with stars in the Milky Way.

Projects to survey the Zone of Avoidance at radio wavelengths, particularly using the 21 cm spin-flip emission line of neutral atomic hydrogen (known in astronomical parlance as HI), have detected many galaxies that could not be detected in the infrared. Examples of galaxies detected from their HI emission include Dwingeloo Galaxy 1 and Dwingeloo Galaxy 2.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Kraan-Korteweg & Lahav 2000, p. 2

[edit] References

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