New Gaia data paint the most detailed picture yet of the Milky Way

The catalog includes asteroids, galaxies and the stuff between stars for the first time

Oval-shaped dark blue map of the Milky Way with color patterns representing concentrations of galaxy mergers, supernovas and newborn stars.

New data from the Gaia spacecraft were used to make this map of interstellar dust in the Milky Way, with high concentrations (black) diminishing (from yellow to blue) farther away from the galactic plane. The patterns here carry traces of billions of years of galaxy mergers, supernovas and newborn stars.