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NEWS BLOG by Alan MacRobert
Hubble's Colliding Galaxies
Arp 148, “Mayall’s Object,” is about 500 million light-years away in Ursa Major. Hubble's sharp resolution reveals that an encounter between two galaxies resulted in a ring galaxy and a long-tailed companion. Gravitational modeling shows how the collision produced a shockwave effect that first drew matter into the center, then caused it to spread outwards in a ring. Infrared images reveal a highly obscured star-forming region behind the dark dust lane across the long galaxy's nucleus. The image is essentially true-color.
NASA / ESA / Hubble Heritage Team
One reason is because there are a lot of them. Unlike most astronomical objects, galaxies are fairly large compared to the distances between them. So every now and then they run into each other unlike stars or planets, which are very tiny compared to their separations.
Nowadays we know that galaxy collisions are more than just interesting flukes. They have been critical to the history of galaxy evolution and star formation throughout the universe. Big galaxies like the Milky Way got built up by collisions and mergers of little ones, which were the first to develop from the Big Bang. A collision disrupts and compresses the interstellar gas clouds in each galaxy involved, and this caused the huge bursts of star formation that lit the early universe. (Younger stars like our Sun are in the minority of latecomers.) The complete piecing together of cosmic-structure formation, from the Big Bang to now, has been one of the triumphs of modern cosmology and it has put galaxy collisions front-and-center.
"Most of the 59 new Hubble images are part of a large investigation of luminous and ultraluminous infrared galaxies called the GOALS project (Great Observatories All-sky LIRG Survey)," says the group. The GOALS survey combines observations from Hubble (which sees visible and near-infrared light); the Spitzer Space Observatory (mid-and far-infrared), the Galaxy Explorer or GALEX (ultraviolet), and the Chandra X-Ray Observatory.
Large-scale violence, small-scale peace
It's no coincidence that a survey of infrared-bright galaxies would pick up a lot of colliders. Collisions cause gas-cloud compression and bursts of star formation; the swarms of massive young stars blaze brilliantly and shed massive amounts of dust; the dust absorbs the brilliant light and re-emits it as infrared radiation; the infrared gets out through the dust for our instruments to see.
Posted by Alan MacRobert, April 23, 2008
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all comments (1 total)
Galaxy collision
Posted by Enrico the Great
April 30, 2008 At 08:25 PM PDT
Beautiful photos, fascinating, REAL science, THIS is what Sky and Telescope does best! This is impact I can sink my teeth into!
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comments (1)