Vista Variables in the Via Lactea

The Lobster Nebula seen with ESO's VISTA telescope, as a part of the VVV survey.[1]

VISTA Variables in the Via Lactea (VVV) is an astronomical survey to map the Milky Way's bulge and a disk area close to the center of the galaxy. It uses the capabilities of the VISTA telescope at the VLT site in Paranal, Chile, to make observations in 5 bands in the near infrared. The survey started in February 2010 and will be completed in 2015.

Goals

VVV is a public infrared (IR) variability survey of the Milky Way bulge and an adjacent section of the mid-plane where star formation activity is high. To complete this survey it will take 1929 hours, covering 109 stars within an area of 520 square degrees, including 33 known globular clusters and around 350 open clusters. The final products will be a deep IR atlas in 5 passbands and a catalogue of 106 variable stars. These will produce a 3-D map of the surveyed region (unlike single-epoch surveys that only give 2-D maps) using well-understood primary distance indicators such as RR Lyrae stars. It will yield important information on the ages of the stellar populations.[2]

The observations will be combined with data from MACHO, OGLE, EROS, VST, SPITZER, HST, CHANDRA, INTEGRAL, and ALMA for a complete understanding of the variable sources in the inner Milky Way. Several important implications for the history of the Milky Way, for globular cluster evolution, for the population census of the bulge and center, and for pulsation theory would follow from this survey.[2]

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External links

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