Tuesday, February 18, 2025

LEDA 1313424: The Bullseye Galaxy - UNIVERSE

The giant galaxy cataloged as LEDA 1313424 is about two and a half times the size of our own Milky Way. Its remarkable appearance in this recently released Hubble Space Telescope image strongly suggests its nickname “The Bullseye Galaxy”. Known as a collisional ring galaxy it has nine rings confirmed by telescopic observations, rippling from its center like waves from a pebble dropped into a pond. Of course, the pebble dropped into the Bullseye galaxy was a galaxy itself. Telescopic observations identify the blue dwarf galaxy at center-left as the likely collider, passing through the giant galaxy’s center and forming concentric rings in the wake of their gravitational interaction. The Bullseye Galaxy lies some 567 million light-years away toward the constellation Pisces. At that distance, this stunning Hubble image would span about 530,000 light-years.


Image & info via APOD

Image Credit: NASAESA, Imad Pasha (Yale), Pieter van Dokkum (Yale)  

Source: LEDA 1313424: The Bullseye Galaxy – Scents of Science   

 

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