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M106, John Bozeman

M106

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M106, John Bozeman

M106

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Description

A new composite of NGC 4258 features X-rays from Chandra (blue), radio waves from the VLA (purple), optical data from Hubble (yellow and blue), and infrared with Spitzer (red). NGC 4258 is well known to astronomers for having "anomalous" arms that are not aligned with the plane of the galaxy, but rather intersect with it. Researchers are trying to understand how the giant black hole in the center of NGC 4258 is affecting the rest of the galaxy. NGC 4258, also known as Messier 106, is located about 23 million light years from Earth.

M106 Chandra X-ray
M106 Hubble Optical - ACS F435W (Blue)
M106 Hubble Optical - ACS, WFC3 F555W+F606W (Green)
M106 Hubble Optical - ACS, WFPC2, WFPC3 F656N+F814W (Red)
M106 Spitzer Infrared - IRAC 8 micron
M106 VLA Radio - L-band 1-2 GHz

Credit: X-ray: NASA/CXC/Caltech/P.Ogle et al; Optical: NASA/STScI & R.Gendler; IR: NASA/JPL-Caltech; Radio: NSF/NRAO/VLA
Observation Date: 3 pointings from 17 Apr 2000 to 29 May 2001
Obs. ID: 350, 1618, 2340
Image Release: NGC 4258 (M106): Galactic Pyrotechnics On Display (2 Jul 2014)

Processed with FITS Liberator, PixInsight and Photoshop 2024

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M106, John Bozeman