This NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image features
the spiral galaxy called NGC 6000.
ESA/Hubble & NASA, A. Filippenko; Acknowledgment:
M. H. Özsaraç
Stars of all ages are on display in this
NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope image
of the sparkling spiral galaxy called NGC 6000, located 102 million light-years
away in the constellation Scorpius.
NGC 6000 has a glowing yellow center and
glittering blue outskirts. These colors reflect differences in the average
ages, masses, and temperatures of the galaxy’s stars. At the heart of the
galaxy, the stars tend to be older and smaller. Less massive stars are cooler
than more massive stars, and somewhat counterintuitively, cooler stars are
redder, while hotter stars are bluer. Farther out along NGC 6000’s spiral arms,
brilliant star clusters host young, massive stars that appear distinctly blue.
Hubble collected the data for this image
while surveying the sites of recent supernova explosions in nearby galaxies. NGC
6000 hosted two recent supernovae: SN 2007ch in 2007 and SN 2010as in 2010.
Using Hubble’s sensitive detectors, researchers can discern the faint glow of
supernovae years after the initial explosion. These observations help constrain
the masses of supernovae progenitor stars and can indicate if they had any
stellar companions.
By zooming in to the right side of the galaxy’s disk in this image, you can see a set of four thin yellow and blue lines. These lines are an asteroid in our solar system that was drifting across Hubble’s field of view as it gazed at NGC 6000. The four lines are due to four different exposures recorded one after another with slight pauses in between. Image processors combined these four exposures to create the final image. The lines appear dashed with alternating colors because each exposure used a filter to collect very specific wavelengths of light, in this case around red and blue. Having these separate exposures of particular wavelengths is important to study and compare stars by their colors — but it also makes asteroid interlopers very obvious!
Source: Hubble Studies Star Ages in Colorful Galaxy - NASA Science

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