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Thursday, September 13, 2012

A Family Portrait of Galaxies


Two very different galaxies attribute in this family portrait taken by the NASA / ESA Hubble Space Telescope, together forming a exclusive galaxy pair called Arp 116. The image shows the dramatic differences in size, structure and color spiral and elliptical galaxies between.

Arp 116 is composed of a giant elliptical galaxy Messier known as 60, and a much smaller spiral galaxy, NGC 4647.


Being a typical elliptical galaxy, Messier 60 on its own may not be very exciting to look at, but adjacent spiral together with its friend, the pair becomes a rather interesting feature in the night sky.

Messier 60 is very bright - the third brightest in the Virgo cluster of galaxies, a collection of more than 1300 galaxies. It is noticeably larger than its neighbor, and has a far higher mass of stars. M 60, like other elliptical galaxies, has a golden color Because of the many old, cool and red stars in it. NGC 4647, on the other hand, has many young and hot stars that glow blue, giving the galaxy a noticeably different hue.

Astronomers have long tried to determine whether these two galaxies are actually interacting. Although they overlap as seen from Earth, there is no clear evidence of vigorous new star formation. In interacting pairs of galaxies, the mutual gravitational pull that the galaxies exert on each other disrupts typically gas clouds, much like tides on Earth are caused by the Moon's gravity. This disruption can cause gas clouds to collapse, forming a sudden burst of new stars.

Although this does not Appear to Have Happened in Arp 116, very detailed studies of Hubble images suggest the onset of some tidal interaction Between the two.

Regardless of Whether They are actually close enough to be interacting, However, the two galaxies are near neighbors Certainly. This means we see the two galaxies at the same scale, making Hubble's family portrait a textbook example of how giant elliptical galaxies Differ in size, structure and color from smaller spiral Their brethren.

Messier 60 was discovered Surprisingly Independently by three different astronomers in 1779. Johann Gottfried Koehler of Dresden first spotted it on April 11 That year while observing a comet, the Italian Barnabus Oriani noticed it a day later, and the French Charles Messier saw it on 15 April. Charles Messier then listed the galaxy in the Messier Catalogue.

Having photographed the galaxy pair with the 5-meter Hale telescope, astronomer Halton Arp U.S. included it in his Atlas of Peculiar Galaxies, published in 1966. The catalog contains 338 images of "peculiar galaxies" - merging, overlapping and interacting galaxies.

This large image is a mosaic of images in visible and infrared light taken by Hubble's Advanced Camera for Surveys and Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2.

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