NGC 4013:
A GALAXY ON THE EDGE
NASA's Hubble Space
Telescope has snapped this remarkable view of a
perfectly "edge-on" galaxy, NGC 4013. This new Hubble
picture reveals with exquisite detail huge clouds
of dust and gas extending along, as well as far
above, the galaxy's main disk.
NGC 4013 is a spiral
galaxy, similar to our own Milky Way, lying some
55 million light-years from Earth in the direction
of the constellation Ursa Major. Viewed pole-on,
it would look like a nearly circular pinwheel, but
NGC 4013 happens to be seen edge-on from our vantage
point. Even at 55 million light-years, the galaxy
is larger than Hubble's field of view, and the image
shows only a little more than half of the object,
albeit with unprecedented detail.
Dark clouds of
interstellar dust stand out in the picture because
they absorb the light of background stars. Most
of the clouds lie in the plane of the galaxy, forming
the dark band, about 500 light-years thick, that
appears to cut the galaxy in two from upper right
to lower left. A similar effect can be seen in our
own sky. If one views the Milky Way by going well
away from city lights, dust clouds in the disk of
our own galaxy appear to split the glowing band
of the Milky Way in two.
When light passes
through a volume containing small particles (for
example, molecules in the Earth's atmosphere, or
interstellar dust particles in galaxies), it becomes
fainter and redder. By studying the color and the
amount of light absorbed by these distant clouds
in NGC 4013, astronomers can estimate the amount
of matter in them. Individual clouds contain as
much as one million times the amount of mass in
our Sun.
Dark interstellar
clouds are believed to be where new stars are formed.
Later, when the dust disperses, the young stars
become visible as clusters of blue stars. NGC 4013
shows several examples of these stellar kindergartens
near the center of the image, lying in front of
the dark band along the galaxy's equator. The extremely
bright star near the upper left corner, however,
is merely a nearby foreground star belonging to
our own Milky Way, which happens to lie in the line
of sight to NGC 4013.
This Hubble Heritage
picture was constructed from Hubble images taken
in January 2000 by Dr. J. Christopher Howk (Johns
Hopkins University) and Dr. Blair D. Savage (University
of Wisconsin-Madison). Images taken through three
different filters have been combined into a color
composite, covering the region of the nucleus of
the galaxy (behind the bright foreground star at
the upper left), and extending along one edge of
the galaxy to the lower right.
Credit: NASA
and The Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA)
Acknowledgment: J.C. Howk (Johns Hopkins University)
and B.D. Savage (University of Wisconsin-Madison) |