Astronomers have found a huge stellar void around the center of our Milky Way galaxy. There has been no star formation in a a region stretching 8,000 light-years near the core of our galaxy for over hundreds of millions of years, looking back through space and time. The bold patch puts in doubt our understanding of the creation and evolution of the Milky Way. Sky at Night Magazine reports: A study has found a region that is devoid of a type of young star called Cepheids. Cepheids are useful for astronomers as they enable the measurement of distances in the Universe. They are relatively young, between 10 and 300 million years old, and pulsate regularly. The length and regularity of these pulsations is related to their luminosity, so astronomers can work out how bright the star actually is, measure how bright it appears from Earth, and thus calculate how far away it is. A group of astronomers led by Prof Noriyuki Matsunaga of the University of Tokyo pointed a near-infrared telescope towards the centre of our Galaxy, in order to hunt for Cepheids amongst the cosmic dust that normally hides them from optical light observations. They found a distinct lack [...]