This NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image features the dwarf galaxy IC 776. ESA/Hubble & NASA, M. Sun
This NASA/ESA Hubble
Space Telescope image features the dwarf galaxy IC 776. This swirling collection of
new and old stars is located in the constellation Virgo, in the Virgo galaxy
cluster, 100 million light-years from Earth. Although IC 776 is a dwarf galaxy,
it's also classified as a SAB-type or ‘weakly barred’ spiral. This highly
detailed Hubble view demonstrates that complexity. IC 776 has a ragged,
disturbed disc that appears to spiral around the core with arcs of star-forming
regions.
The image is from an observation
program dedicated to the study of dwarf galaxies in the Virgo cluster that is
searching for the visible light emissions from sources of X-rays in these
galaxies. X-rays are often emitted by accretion discs, where material that is
drawn into a compact object by gravity crashes together and forms a hot,
glowing disc. The compact object can be a white dwarf or neutron star in a
binary pair that is stealing material from its companion star, or it can be the
supermassive black hole at the heart of a galaxy devouring material around it.
Dwarf galaxies like IC 776, traveling through the Virgo cluster, experience
pressure from intergalactic gas that is similar to the pressure you feel from
air hitting your face when you ride a bicycle. This intergalactic gas pressure
can both stimulate star formation and feed the central black hole in a galaxy.
As more material swirls down toward the black hole, it creates an energetic
accretion disc, hot enough to emit X-rays.
While Hubble is not able to see
X-rays, it can coordinate with X-ray telescopes such as NASA’s Chandra
X-Ray Observatory, revealing the sources of this radiation in high resolution using visible
light. Dwarf galaxies are very important to our understanding of cosmology and
the evolution of galaxies. As with many areas of astronomy, the ability to
examine these galaxies across the electromagnetic spectrum is critical to their
study.
Text Credit: European Space Agency
(ESA)
Source: Hubble Hunts Visible Light Sources of X-Rays - NASA Science
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