This NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image features Arp 122, a peculiar galaxy that in fact comprises two galaxies – NGC 6040, the tilted, warped spiral galaxy and LEDA 59642, the round, face-on spiral – that are in the midst of a collision. ESA/Hubble & NASA, J. Dalcanton, Dark Energy Survey/DOE/FNAL/DECam/CTIO/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA Acknowledgement: L. Shatz
This NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image features Arp
122, a peculiar galaxy that in fact comprises two galaxies – NGC
6040, the tilted, warped spiral galaxy and LEDA 59642, the round,
face-on spiral – that are in the midst of a collision. This dramatic cosmic
encounter is located at the very safe distance of roughly 570 million
light-years from Earth. Peeking in at the lower-left corner is the elliptical
galaxy NGC 6041, a central member of the galaxy cluster that Arp 122 resides in,
but otherwise not participating in this monster merger.
Galactic collisions and mergers are monumentally energetic and dramatic
events, but they take place on a very slow timescale. For example, the Milky
Way is on track to collide with its nearest galactic neighbor,
the Andromeda Galaxy (M31), but these two galaxies have a good four
billion years to go before they actually meet. The process of colliding and
merging will not be a quick one either: it might take hundreds of millions of
years to unfold. These collisions take so long because of the truly massive distances
involved.
Galaxies are composed of stars and their solar systems, dust, gas, and
invisible dark matter. In galactic collisions, therefore, these constituent
components may experience enormous changes in the gravitational forces acting
on them. In time, this completely changes the structure of the two (or more)
colliding galaxies, and sometimes ultimately results in a single, merged
galaxy. That may well be what results from the collision pictured in this
image. Galaxies that result from mergers are thought to have a regular or
elliptical structure, as the merging process disrupts more complex structures
(such as those observed in spiral galaxies). It would be fascinating to know
what Arp 122 will look like once this collision is complete… but that will not
happen for a long, long time.
Text credit: European Space Agency
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