The image above shows a newly discovered molecular cloud. This cloud was discovered through the Milky Way Imaging Scroll Painting project, which uses a 13.7-meter millimeter telescope to survey molecular clouds in our galaxy. Xuepeng Chen (Purple Mountain Observatory; University of Science and Technology of China) and collaborators came upon this cloud in survey data from a region of the Milky Way opposite the galactic center. The newfound cloud is roughly 5,400 light-years away, spans an area of 245 by 294 light-years, and contains an estimated 80,000 solar masses. The most remarkable feature of the cloud is its structure: it appears to have a central cavity, an elliptical disk-like body, and spiral arms. Chen’s team has suggested that the cloud owes its surprising structure to density wave theory — the same process thought to govern the formation of spiral arms in galaxies — but other possibilities such as collisions between molecular clouds can’t yet be ruled out. To learn more about the properties of this unusual molecular cloud, be sure to check out the full research article linked below.
Citation
“Discovery of a Giant Spiral Molecular Cloud in the Galactic Anticenter,” Xuepeng Chen et al 2026 AJ 172 4. doi:10.3847/1538-3881/ae6800