This dataset, the result of a decade of work, was collected by astronomers from the ARC Centre of Excellence in All Sky Astrophysics in 3 Dimensions (ASTRO 3D) using the Anglo-Australian Telescope (AAT), which is marking its 50th anniversary this week.
"Our focus is on gathering as much high-quality data as possible," said Sven Buder, a research fellow at the Australian National University and part of ASTRO 3D.
"GALAH has identified the chemical elements that make up the stars of the Milky Way. This dataset now enhances our ability to accurately age the stars in our neighborhood and trace their origins."
The release marks the fourth from the Galactic Archaeology with HERMES (GALAH) project, which for the past 10 years has explored star formation, chemical enrichment, and mergers in the Milky Way.
The survey, which recorded 1.08 million observations of 920,000 stars over 684 nights, utilized an Australian instrument called the High Efficiency and Resolution Multi-Element Spectrograph (HERMES), connected to the AAT.
"We measured elements within these stars - carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, and even heavy elements used in smartphones and electric vehicles," Dr. Buder added. "This data is crucial to understanding how these elements are produced in stars and explains the origins of life's building blocks."
The data appears like 'stellar rainbows' - overlapping barcodes that reveal the stars' chemical composition. This helps in understanding how elements are distributed across the universe and could offer clues about planetary systems around the stars.
The global astronomy community eagerly anticipates each GALAH dataset release, with 290 scientific studies using its data so far. A previous release paper, which included data on 300,000 stars, garnered over 400 citations, making it the most cited work of the year in its journal.
The survey has even indicated that some stars may have consumed planets.
"The GALAH survey has detected signs that some stars might have 'eaten' planets," said Professor Daniel Zucker of Macquarie University. "This is visible in the chemical makeup of the star, as elements from the consumed planet leave markers in the star's spectrum."
The GALAH dataset is also paving the way for future AI-driven astronomical analysis. With the growing reliance on machine learning, this Australian-led project is establishing a foundation for future advancements in the field.
"Australia is setting the stage for Big Data in astronomy," said Professor Zucker. "This dataset will be a key resource for training future AI systems in the field."
Associate Professor Sarah Martell of UNSW expressed her enthusiasm for the potential discoveries that astronomers worldwide could make using this data.
"We're entering an exciting time where discoveries about our universe will flow from the data we've gathered right here in Australia, using Australian telescopes and research," Martell said.
More than 100 scientists from universities in Australia, Italy, the UK, Slovenia, the US, Hungary, Sweden, the Netherlands, and Germany contribute to the GALAH project.
Professor Emma Ryan-Weber, Director of ASTRO 3D, highlighted GALAH's role in ASTRO 3D's mission.
"It helps us understand how galaxies accumulate mass over time," she said. "The chemical information gathered is like stellar DNA - we can trace where each star came from, its age, movements, and how the Milky Way and other galaxies evolved."
As ASTRO 3D's mission nears completion, the GALAH project will leave a long-lasting legacy of Australian contributions to astronomical discovery.
The GALAH DR4 dataset can be found here
Related Links
GALAH
Stellar Chemistry, The Universe And All Within It
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