HUBBLE PHOTOGRAPHS WARPED GALAXY AS CAMERA PASSES MILESTONE
NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has
captured an image of an unusual edge-on galaxy,
revealing remarkable details of its warped dusty
disk and showing how colliding galaxies spawn the
formation of new generations of stars.
The dust and spiral arms of normal
spiral galaxies, like our own Milky Way, appear
flat when viewed edge-on. This month's Hubble Heritage
image of ESO 510-G13 shows a galaxy that, by contrast,
has an unusual twisted disk structure, first seen
in ground-based photographs obtained at the European
Southern Observatory (ESO) in Chile. ESO 510-G13
lies in the southern constellation Hydra, roughly
150 million light-years from Earth.
Details of the structure of ESO 510-G13
are visible because the interstellar dust clouds
that trace its disk are silhouetted from behind
by light from the galaxy's bright, smooth central
bulge.
The strong warping of the disk indicates
that ESO 510-G13 has recently undergone a collision
with a nearby galaxy and is in the process of swallowing
it. Gravitational forces distort the structures
of the galaxies as their stars, gas, and dust merge
together in a process that takes millions of years.
Eventually the disturbances will die out, and ESO
510-G13 will become a normal-appearing single galaxy.
In the outer regions of ESO 510-G13,
especially on the right-hand side of the image,
we see that the twisted disk contains not only dark
dust, but also bright clouds of blue stars. This
shows that hot, young stars are being formed in
the disk. Astronomers believe that the formation
of new stars may be triggered by collisions between
galaxies, as their interstellar clouds smash together
and are compressed.
The Heritage Team used Hubble's Wide
Field Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2) to observe ESO
510-G13 in April 2001. Pictures obtained through
blue, green, and red filters were combined to make
this color-composite image, which emphasizes the
contrast between the dusty spiral arms, the bright
bulge, and the blue star-forming regions. During
the observations of ESO 510-G13, WFPC2 passed the
milestone of taking its 100,000th image since its
installation in the telescope by shuttle astronauts
in 1993.
Credit: NASA and the Hubble
Heritage Team (STScI/AURA)
Acknowledgment: C. Conselice (U. Wisconsin/STScI)
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