News on Galaxies
- Awsome image of Milkyway-like galaxy
- Galactic magnetic field in a lab, bolsters astrophysical theory
- The biggest galaxies's wild youth
- Discovery of distant dwarf galaxy
- Discovery of largest early galaxy-cluster
- Discovery of earliest proto-cluster of galaxies
- Starving galaxies
- Stardust in nearby galaxies
- New instrument peers through the heart of the Milkyway
- Starbirths in the Centaurus A galaxy
- Vigorious star-forming galaxies 600mio years after Big Bang
- Ultra compact dwraf galaxies: Are the actually just starclusters?
- The M74 spiral galaxy
- New map of the Milkyway's spiral-bar
- A galaxy get slushed
- A galaxy blooming with new stars
- The mysterious red galaxies
- Supermassive black holes may be leftovers from quasars
- Biggest structure ever discovered
- New map of the Milkyway's magnetic field, with 150years old technique
- Discovery of Super-supermassive black holes
- Strange new kind of galaxies
- 4 tidal vawes surrounding the Milkyway
- Discovery of galactic arc
- Galaxies gasseous haloes larger than previously thougth
|
NGC 4696: a cosmic question mark
Thursday, 12 August 2010 11:57
|
|
| Astronomy - Galaxies |
|
Curling around itself like a question mark, the unusual looking galaxy NGC 4696 itself begs many questions. Why is it such a strange shape? What are the odd, capillary-like filaments that stretch out of it? And what is the role of a large black hole in explaining its decidedly odd appearance? This picture, taken by Hubble’s Advanced Camera for Surveys, is not just a beautiful snapshot of NGC 4696, the largest galaxy in the Centaurus Cluster (galaxy cluster Abell 3526). It is also an illustration of the rich variety of objects that astronomers can see with the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope. NGC 4696 is an elliptical galaxy with a difference. Lacking the complex structure and active star formation of their spiral brethren, elliptical galaxies are usually little more than shapeless collections of ageing stars. Most likely formed by collisions between spiral galaxies, elliptical galaxies experience a brief burst of star formation triggered as the interstellar dust and gas crash into each other, but which quickly leaves the young elliptical galaxies exhausted. With no more gas to form new stars from, the galaxies gradually grow older and fainter. But NGC 4696 is more interesting than most elliptical galaxies. The huge dust lane, around 30 000 light-years across, that sweeps across the face of the galaxy is one way in which it looks different from most other elliptical galaxies. Viewed at certain wavelengths, strange thin filaments of ionised hydrogen are visible within it. In this picture, these structures are visible as a subtle marbling effect across the galaxy’s bright centre. Looking at NGC 4696 in the optical and near-infrared wavelengths seen by Hubble gives a beautiful and dramatic view of the galaxy. But in fact, much of its inner turmoil is still hidden from view in this picture. At the heart of the galaxy, a supermassive black hole is blowing out jets of matter at nearly the speed of light. When looked at in X-ray wavelengths, such as those visible from NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory, huge voids within the galaxy become visible, telltale signs of these jets’ enormous power.
The Hubble picture in the top of the page was created from images taken using the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope’s Advanced Camera for Surveys. A total of 5440 s of exposure through a blue filter (F435W, shown in blue) were combined with 2320 s through a near-infrared filter (F814W, shown in red).The field of view is 3.2 by 1.5 arcminutes. Sources: ESA's Hubble-homepage and Chandra's homepage |





