This NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope features the
spiral galaxy called NGC 5042
ESA/Hubble & NASA, D. Thilker
This NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image
of a vibrant spiral galaxy called NGC 5042 resides about 48 million light-years
from Earth in the constellation Hydra (the water snake). The galaxy nicely
fills the frame of this Hubble image, while a single, foreground star from the
Milky Way shines with cross-shaped diffraction spikes near the galaxy’s edge
toward the top, center of the image.
Hubble observed NGC 5042 in six
wavelength bands from the ultraviolet to infrared to create this multicolored
portrait. The galaxy’s cream-colored center is packed with ancient stars, and
the galaxy’s spiral arms are decorated with patches of young, blue stars. The
elongated yellow-orange objects scattered around the image are background
galaxies far more distant than NGC 5042.
Perhaps NGC 5042’s most striking feature
is its collection of brilliant pink gas clouds studded throughout its spiral
arms. These flashy clouds are H II (pronounced “H-two” or hydrogen-two)
regions, and they get their distinctive color from hydrogen atoms that were
ionized by ultraviolet light. If you look closely at this image, you’ll see
that many of these reddish clouds are associated with clumps of blue stars,
often appearing to form a shell around the stars.
H II regions arise in expansive clouds of hydrogen gas, and only hot and massive stars produce enough high-energy, ultraviolet light to create a H II region. Because the stars capable of creating H II regions only live for a few million years — just a blink of an eye in galactic terms — this image represents a fleeting snapshot of this galaxy.
By: NASA Hubble Mission Team, Goddard Space Flight Center
Source: Hubble Spies a Spiral in the Water Snake - NASA Science
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