This NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image captures
the dwarf irregular galaxy NGC 5238.
ESA/Hubble & NASA, F. Annibali
This NASA/ESA Hubble
Space Telescope image features the dwarf irregular galaxy NGC 5238, located 14.5
million light-years from Earth in the constellation Canes Venatici. Its
unexciting, blob-like appearance seems to resemble an oversized star cluster more than a classic image of a galaxy. Its lackluster appearance
belies its complicated structure, which is the subject of a great deal of
research. As the image reveals, Hubble is able to pick out the galaxy’s
countless stars, as well as its associated globular clusters — glowing, bright
spots both inside and around the galaxy swarmed by even more stars.
Astronomers theorize that NGC 5238
may have had a close encounter with another galaxy as recently as a billion
years ago. NGC 5238’s distorted shape provides evidence for this interaction.
As the two galaxies interacted, their gravity caused distortions in the
distribution of stars in each galaxy. There’s no nearby galaxy which could have
caused this disturbance, so astronomers think NGC 5238 devoured a smaller
satellite galaxy. Astronomers look for traces of the consumed galaxy by closely
examining the population of stars in NGC 5238, a task made for Hubble’s
excellent resolution. One tell-tale sign of the smaller galaxy would be groups
of stars with different properties from most of NGC 5238’s other stars,
indicating they were originally formed in a separate galaxy. Another sign would
be a burst of star formation that occurred abruptly at around the same time the
two galaxies merged. The Hubble data used to create this image will help
astronomers determine NGC 5238’s history.
Despite their small size and
unremarkable appearance, it’s not unusual for dwarf galaxies like NGC 5238 to
drive our understanding of galaxy formation and evolution. One main theory of
galaxy evolution is that galaxies formed ‘bottom-up’ in a hierarchical fashion:
star clusters and small galaxies were the first to form out of gas and dark
matter. Over time, gravity gradually assembled these smaller objects into
galaxy clusters and superclusters, which explains the shape of the largest
structures we see in the universe today. A dwarf irregular galaxy like NGC 5238
merging with a smaller companion is just the type of event that might have
started the process of galaxy assembly in the early universe. Hubble’s
observations of tiny NGC 5238 may help test some of our most fundamental ideas
of how the universe evolves!
Source: Hubble Studies a Potential Galactic Merger - NASA Science
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