Ann wrote:Chris wrote:
It might be a galaxy. Or it might be an unusual form of cluster that simply hasn't been properly classified.
It absolutely doesn't look like a galaxy to me.
Nor to me. But I've seen enough odd things in astronomical images to not allow my visual impression to sway me too much.
I don't trust that there's actually a star halo around this object. I've seen similar illusions.
I don't trust color. We don't consistently see redshift, and in any case, this image is not made from filters which create an image with accurate color.
We don't even have a solid definition for what a galaxy is. There are dwarf and irregular galaxies that overlap globular clusters in size, mass, and composition.
What I know is that this seems to be a peculiar object. It is substantially more elliptical than any other globular cluster I've been able to identify. It appears to have a disc bisecting it (I don't believe this is a diffraction artifact, as there is at least one other object in the image with a similar size which is brighter and has no diffraction artifacts). I think the most likely explanation is that it's either an incompletely formed globular (one model says they form irregular, and become globular because of tidal effects), or a previously globular cluster that has become disrupted.
In any case, we can do little more than make educated guesses until somebody points some instruments that way and collects more data.