HEIC: Transforming Galaxies (Mrk 779)

See new, spectacular, or mysterious sky images.
Post Reply
User avatar
bystander
Apathetic Retiree
Posts: 21592
Joined: Mon Aug 28, 2006 2:06 pm
Location: Oklahoma

HEIC: Transforming Galaxies (Mrk 779)

Post by bystander » Mon Feb 06, 2012 6:34 pm

Transforming Galaxies (Mrk 779)
ESA/HEIC Hubble Picture of the Week | 2012 Feb 06

Many of the Universe’s galaxies are like our own, displaying beautiful spiral arms wrapping around a bright nucleus. Examples in this stunning image, taken with the Wide Field Camera 3 on the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, include the tilted galaxy at the bottom of the frame, shining behind a Milky Way star, and the small spiral at the top centre.

Other galaxies are even odder in shape. Markarian 779, the galaxy at the top of this image, has a distorted appearance because it is likely the product of a recent galactic merger between two spirals. This collision destroyed the spiral arms of the galaxies and scattered much of their gas and dust, transforming them into a single peculiar galaxy with a unique shape.

This galaxy is part of the Markarian catalogue, a database of over 1500 galaxies named after B. E. Markarian, the Armenian astronomer who studied them in the 1960s. He surveyed the sky for bright objects with unusually strong emission in the ultraviolet.

Ultraviolet radiation can come from a range of sources, so the Markarian catalogue is quite diverse. An excess of ultraviolet emissions can be the result of the nucleus of an “active” galaxy, powered by a supermassive black hole at its centre. It can also be due to events of intense star formation, called starbursts, possibly triggered by galactic collisions. Markarian galaxies are, therefore, often the subject of studies aimed at understanding active galaxies, starburst activity, and galaxy interactions and mergers.

Credit: NASA/ESA/Hubble

Zoomable Image

<< Previous ESA/HEIC POTW
Know the quiet place within your heart and touch the rainbow of possibility; be
alive to the gentle breeze of communication, and please stop being such a jerk.
— Garrison Keillor

User avatar
Ann
4725 Å
Posts: 13810
Joined: Sat May 29, 2010 5:33 am

Re: HEIC: Transforming Galaxies (Mrk 779)

Post by Ann » Tue Feb 07, 2012 4:52 am

It's a pity we aren't told what filters were used to produce the image. Orange and infrared, perhaps.

The spiral at bottom seems to be very lacking in star formation, and that appears to be the case with Markarian 779, too. Unless it has a region of intense star formation near its nucleus, the ultraviolet light it emits must come from the accretion disk of a black hole.

Ann
Color Commentator

Post Reply