ABOUT THIS IMAGE:
Four and a half billion light-years away in the constellation Virgo,  scores of  galaxies have been drawn together by the mutual gravitational  pull.  NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope has peered at this galaxy cluster  and  gravitational lens, known as MACS 1206. Gravity from the cluster’s   immense mass bends the space around it, causing the images of more   distant galaxies directly behind the cluster (that are within our line  of  sight) to be warped and cast into arc-like smears of light. The  orange  streak to the right of the image center is one such example of  an  optically distorted galaxy that resides millions of light-years  behind  MACS 1206. The circular pattern of smaller galaxy pieces is more   evidence of gravitational lensing.
The central object in the cluster is a giant elliptical galaxy plump  with  billions of old, reddish suns, surrounded by a thinner halo of  stars. Disk-shaped spiral galaxies appear, both edge- and face-on,  showing a  defined structure of arms encircling their central bulges.  The bluer  galaxies have stars actively forming within them and,  consequently, host  groups of young blue stars that contribute to their  overall hue. In  contrast, red galaxies — especially those elliptical  galaxies like the  center one — are more stable in their behavior, with  very few little  recent star formation.
ABOUT THIS IMAGE:

Four and a half billion light-years away in the constellation Virgo, scores of galaxies have been drawn together by the mutual gravitational pull. NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope has peered at this galaxy cluster and gravitational lens, known as MACS 1206. Gravity from the cluster’s immense mass bends the space around it, causing the images of more distant galaxies directly behind the cluster (that are within our line of sight) to be warped and cast into arc-like smears of light. The orange streak to the right of the image center is one such example of an optically distorted galaxy that resides millions of light-years behind MACS 1206. The circular pattern of smaller galaxy pieces is more evidence of gravitational lensing.

The central object in the cluster is a giant elliptical galaxy plump with billions of old, reddish suns, surrounded by a thinner halo of stars. Disk-shaped spiral galaxies appear, both edge- and face-on, showing a defined structure of arms encircling their central bulges. The bluer galaxies have stars actively forming within them and, consequently, host groups of young blue stars that contribute to their overall hue. In contrast, red galaxies — especially those elliptical galaxies like the center one — are more stable in their behavior, with very few little recent star formation.

5 notes

Show

  1. badgopher posted this