Image Credit: Hubble Legacy Archive, NASA, ESA; Processing & Copyright: Davide Coverta
Sunday, March 16, 2014
NASA Photo of the Day
Today:
The Antennae Galaxies in Collision
Image Credit: Hubble Legacy Archive, NASA, ESA; Processing & Copyright: Davide Coverta
Explanation:
Two galaxies are squaring off in
Corvus and
here are the latest pictures.
When two
galaxies collide, the stars that compose them usually do not.
That's because
galaxies are mostly empty space and, however bright,
stars only take up only a small amount of that space.
During the slow, hundred million year
collision,
one galaxy can still rip the other apart gravitationally, and
dust and
gas common to both galaxies does
collide.
In this clash of the
titans, dark
dust pillars mark massive
molecular clouds are being compressed during the
galactic encounter,
causing the rapid birth of millions of stars,
some of which are gravitationally bound together in
massive star clusters.
Image Credit: Hubble Legacy Archive, NASA, ESA; Processing & Copyright: Davide Coverta
Labels:
cool stuff
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