NGC 4622 SPIRAL GALAXY
Astronomers have found a spiral galaxy that
may be spinning to the beat of a different cosmic
drummer. To the surprise of astronomers, the galaxy,
called NGC 4622, appears to be rotating in the
opposite direction to what they expected. Pictures
by NASA's Hubble Space Telescope helped astronomers
determine that the galaxy may be spinning clockwise
by showing which side of the galaxy is closer
to Earth. A Hubble telescope photo of the oddball
galaxy is this month's Hubble Heritage offering.
The image shows NGC 4622 and its outer pair of
winding arms full of new stars [shown in blue].
Astronomers are puzzled by the clockwise rotation
because of the direction the outer spiral arms
are pointing. Most spiral galaxies have arms of
gas and stars that trail behind as they turn.
But this galaxy has two "leading" outer
arms that point toward the direction of the galaxy's
clockwise rotation. To add to the conundrum, NGC
4622 also has a "trailing" inner arm
that is wrapped around the galaxy in the opposite
direction it is rotating. Based on galaxy simulations,
a team of
astronomers had expected that the galaxy was turning
counterclockwise.
NGC 4622 is a rare example of a spiral galaxy
with arms pointing in opposite directions. What
caused this galaxy to behave differently from
most galaxies? Astronomers suspect that NGC 4622
interacted with another galaxy. Its two outer
arms are lopsided, meaning that something disturbed
it. The new Hubble image suggests that NGC 4622
consumed a small companion galaxy. The galaxy's
core provides new evidence for a merger between
NGC 4622 and a smaller galaxy. This information
could be the key to understanding the unusual
leading arms.
Galaxies, which consist of stars, gas, and dust,
rotate very slowly. Our Sun, one of many stars
in our Milky Way Galaxy, completes a circuit around
the Milky Way every 250 million years. NGC 4622
resides 111 million light-years away in the constellation
Centaurus. The pictures were taken in May 2001
with Hubble's Wide Field Planetary Camera 2.
The science team, consisting of Ron Buta and
Gene Byrd from the University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa,
and Tarsh Freeman of Bevill State Community College
in Alabama, observed NGC 4622 in ultraviolet,
infrared, and blue and green filters. Their composite
image and science findings
were presented at the meeting of the American
Astronomical Society in January of 2002.
Credit: NASA and the Hubble Heritage Team
(STScI/AURA)
Acknowledgment: Dr. Ron Buta (U. Alabama), Dr.
Gene Byrd (U. Alabama)
and Tarsh Freeman (Bevill State Community College) |