Photos
Index Search Post
Prev Image Image 152 of 1193 Next Image
/photos/images/arp81_keel_c2.jpg Arp 81: 100 Million Years Later

Explanation: From planet Earth, we view this strongly interacting pair of galaxies, cataloged as Arp 81, as they were only about 100 million years after their mutual closest approach. The havoc wreaked by gravity during their ominous encounter is detailed in this color composite image from the Hubble Space Telescope, showing twisted streams of gas and dust, a chaos of massive star formation, and a tidal tail stretching for 200 thousand light-years or so as it sweeps behind the cosmic wreckage. Also known as NGC 6622 (left) and NGC 6621, the galaxies are roughly equal in size but are destined to merge into one large galaxy in the distant future, making repeated approaches until they finally coalesce. Located in the constellation Draco, the galaxies are 280 million light-years away. The dark vertical band which seems to run through NGC 6621's location is a camera artifact. [W. Keel (Univ. Alabama), K. Borne (George Mason Univ.), NASA]

Random Image
Young Star, Dark Cloud Explanation: High-speed outflows of molecular gas from a young stellar object glow in infrared light, revealing themselves in...
Rendered Laser Pipe, Needs open house sign or a giant gig pyramid
In the Center of the Omega Nebula Explanation: In the depths of the dark clouds of dust and molecular gas known as the Omega Nebula, stars continue ...
What do you think of this Image? Vote Thumbs Up or Thumbs Down. Vote Thumbs Up for this Item Vote Thumbs Down for this Item Reputation: 4 / Feedback: 0 
Site Content compiled in Asheville, NC / Web Hosting by Gigfoot
GO LIVE!