by APOD Robot » Thu Jan 07, 2010 4:55 am
The Tail of the Small Magellanic Cloud
Explanation: A satellite galaxy of our Milky Way, the
Small Magellanic Cloud is wonder of the southern sky, named for 16th century Portuguese circumnavigator
Ferdinand Magellan. Some 200,000 light-years distant in the constellation Tucana, the small irregular galaxy's stars, gas, and dust that lie along a bar and extended "wing", are familiar in images
from optical telescopes. But the galaxy also has a tail.
Explored in this false-color, infrared mosaic from the
Spitzer Space Telescope, the tail extends to the right of the more familiar bar and wing. Likely stripped from the galaxy by gravitational tides, the tail contains mostly gas, dust, and
newly formed stars. Two clusters of newly formed stars, warming their surrounding natal dust clouds, are seen in the tail as red spots.
[url=http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap100107.html][img]http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/calendar/S_100107.jpg[/img] [size=150]The Tail of the Small Magellanic Cloud[/size][/url]
[b] Explanation: [/b] A satellite galaxy of our Milky Way, the [url=http://spitzer.caltech.edu/news/1042-ssc2010-02-Galaxy-Exposes-its-Dusty-Inner-Workings-in-New-Spitzer-Image]Small Magellanic Cloud[/url] is wonder of the southern sky, named for 16th century Portuguese circumnavigator [url=http://www.mariner.org/education/ferdinand-magellan-and-first-circumnavigation-world]Ferdinand Magellan[/url]. Some 200,000 light-years distant in the constellation Tucana, the small irregular galaxy's stars, gas, and dust that lie along a bar and extended "wing", are familiar in images [url=http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap071001.html]from optical telescopes[/url]. But the galaxy also has a tail. [url=http://spitzer.caltech.edu/images/2878-ssc2010-02b-Little-Galaxy-with-a-Tail]Explored in this[/url] false-color, infrared mosaic from the [url=http://spitzer.caltech.edu/]Spitzer Space Telescope[/url], the tail extends to the right of the more familiar bar and wing. Likely stripped from the galaxy by gravitational tides, the tail contains mostly gas, dust, and [url=http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap091113.html]newly formed stars[/url]. Two clusters of newly formed stars, warming their surrounding natal dust clouds, are seen in the tail as red spots.
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