This Hubble Space Telescope image reveals details in the barred spiral galaxy NGC 4731. ESA/Hubble & NASA, D. Thilker
This new image from the
NASA/ESA Hubble
Space Telescope shows the broad and sweeping spiral galaxy NGC 4731. It lies in the
constellation Virgo and is located 43 million light-years from Earth. This
highly detailed image uses data collected from six different filters. The
abundance of color illustrates the galaxy's billowing clouds of gas, dark dust
bands, bright pink star-forming regions and, most obviously, the long, glowing
bar with trailing arms.
Barred spiral galaxies outnumber
both regular spirals and elliptical galaxies put together, numbering around 60%
of all galaxies. The visible bar structure is a result of orbits of stars and
gas in the galaxy lining up, forming a dense region that individual stars move
in and out of over time. This is the same process that maintains a galaxy's
spiral arms, but it is somewhat more mysterious for bars: spiral galaxies seem
to form bars in their centers as they mature, which helps explain the large
number of bars we see today, but they can also lose them if the accumulated
mass along the bar grows unstable. The orbital patterns and the gravitational
interactions within a galaxy that sustain the bar also transport matter and
energy into it, fueling star formation. Indeed, the observing program studying
NGC 4731 seeks to investigate this flow of matter in galaxies.
Beyond the bar, the spiral arms of
NGC 4731 stretch out far past the confines of this close-in Hubble view.
Astronomers think the galaxy’s elongated arms are the result of gravitational
interactions with other, nearby galaxies in the Virgo cluster.
Text Credit: European Space Agency
(ESA)
Source: Hubble Views the Lights of a Galactic Bar - NASA Science
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