This NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image features Arp 72. ESA/Hubble & NASA, L. Galbany, J. Dalcanton, Dark Energy Survey/DOE/FNAL/DECam/CTIO/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA
This image from the NASA/ESA Hubble
Space Telescope features Arp 72, a very selective galaxy group that only includes two
galaxies interacting due to gravity: NGC 5996 (the large spiral galaxy) and NGC
5994 (its smaller companion, in the lower left of the image). Both galaxies lie
approximately 160 million light-years from Earth, and their cores are separated
from each other by a distance of about 67,000 light-years. The distance between
the galaxies at their closest points is even smaller, closer to 40,000
light-years. While this might sound vast, in galactic separation terms it is
really quite close. For comparison, the distance between the Milky Way and its
nearest independent galactic neighbor Andromeda is around 2.5 million
light-years. Alternatively, the distance between the Milky Way and its largest
and brightest satellite galaxy, the Large Magellanic Cloud (satellite galaxies
orbit around another galaxy), is about 162,000 light-years.
Given this and the fact that NGC
5996 is roughly comparable in size to the Milky Way, it is not surprising that
NGC 5996 and NGC 5994 — separated by only about 40,000 light-years — are
interacting with one another. In fact, the interaction likely distorted NGC
5996’s spiral shape. It also prompted the formation of the very long and faint
tail of stars and gas curving away from NGC 5996, up to the top right of the
image. This ‘tidal tail’ is a common phenomenon that appears when galaxies
closely interact and is visible in other Hubble images of interacting galaxies.
Text credit: European Space Agency
(ESA)
Source: Hubble
Peers at Pair of Closely Interacting Galaxies (nasa.gov)
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