The galaxy NGC 1961 unfurls its gorgeous spiral arms in this newly released image from NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope. Glittering, blue regions of bright young stars dot the dusty spiral arms winding around the galaxy’s glowing center.
NGC 1961 is an intermediate spiral and an
AGN, or active galactic nuclei, type of galaxy. Intermediate spirals are in
between “barred” and “unbarred” spiral galaxies, meaning they don’t have a
well-defined bar of stars at their centers. AGN galaxies have very bright
centers that often far outshine the rest of the galaxy at certain wavelengths
of light. These galaxies likely have supermassive black holes at their cores
churning out bright jets and winds that shape their evolution. NGC 1961 is a
fairly common type of AGN that emits low-energy-charged particles.
The data used to create this image came
from two proposals. One studied previously unobserved Arp galaxies, while the
other looked at the progenitors and explosions of a variety of supernovae.
Located about 180 million light-years away, NGC 1961 resides in the constellation Camelopardalis.
Image credit: NASA, ESA, J. Dalcanton (University of
Washington), R. Foley (University of California - Santa Cruz); Image
processing: G. Kober (NASA Goddard/Catholic University of America)
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