The Disk is extremely flat. Most stars and ALL the
gas and dust is found here. 15% of our Galaxy's mass is in the
gas and dust (the interstellar medium). The very
central portion of the light is blocked out due to that dust. Looking just
up or down from the thin disk, we start to see star light. The stellar
distribution is slightly fatter than the gas and dust distribution.
In order to see the Nuclear Bulge of our galaxy, it is best to
look at infrared wavelengths.
The light in the picture below is due entirely to cool stars. They
represent a very old population of stars. Many of these stars are
in a flattened, spherical orbit around the very center of the galaxy
(the nuclear bulge). Cool stars are also detected
along the plane of our galaxy, in the disk.
Below is a real photograph of the galaxy, NGC 891. It is seen
almost EXACTLY edge on. It looks suspiciously like the images of
our disk in the previous lecture.