Image of the day 02/06/2013

    NGC 7049, Steven Marx

    NGC 7049

    Image of the day 02/06/2013

      NGC 7049, Steven Marx

      NGC 7049

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      Description

      NGC 7049 - Raw fits data obtained from Hubble Legacy Archive.

      NGC 7049 is a galaxy that spans about 150,000 light-years and lies about 100 million light-years away from Earth in the inconspicuous southern constellation of Indus. It's unusual appearance is largely due to a prominent rope-like dust ring which stands out against the starlight behind it. These dust lanes are usually seen in young galaxies with active star-forming regions. NGC 7049 shows the features of both an elliptical galaxy and a spiral galaxy, and has relatively few globular clusters. The bright star at the top of the ring is in our own Galaxy. Not visible is an unusual central polar ring of gas circling out of the plane near the galaxy's center. NGC 7049 is the brightest cluster galaxy (BCG) of the Indus triplet of galaxies (NGC 7029, NGC 7041, NGC 7049), and its structure might have arisen from several recent galaxy collisions. Typical BCGs are some of the oldest and most massive galaxies.

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      NGC 7049, Steven Marx