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NASA Witnesses a Galactic Spectacle Thursday, October 07, 2010 - Ehud Rattner Home >> News >> Space
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NASA has recently released a marvelous image of two tangled galaxies, captured using three different telescopes: the Chandra X-ray Observatory, the Hubble Space Telescope, and the Spitzer Space Telescope.
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Each imaging device provided different kinds of data. For instance, using data retrieved by Spitzer, astronomers observed infrared light from warm dust clouds heated by newborn stars, with the brightest clouds lying in the overlap region between the two galaxies. The Hubble data revealed old stars and star-forming regions in gold and white, while filaments of dust appear in brown. Many of the fainter objects in the optical image are clusters containing thousands of stars. The Chandra X-ray Observatory showed huge clouds of hot, interstellar gas; assumptions are that is has been injected with rich deposits of elements from supernova explosions. This enriched gas, which includes elements such as oxygen, iron, magnesium and silicon, will be incorporated into new generations of stars and planets. The bright, point-like sources in the image are produced by material falling onto black holes and neutron stars that are remnants of the massive stars. Theories are that some of these black holes may have masses that are almost one hundred times that of our sun. Although the new image – created using multiple devices – provides much data regarding the Antennae Galaxies, NASA hopes that future research will give astronomers even more information regarding stellar phenomena. TFOT has also covered the dramatic change in one of the most active black holes, observed by NASA’s Suzaku telescope, the features of the Chandra X-ray Observatory, and the imaging of new tidal galactic-debris, related to the Antennae Galaxies. For more information about NASA’s latest image of the Antennae Galaxies, see the official press release. |
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