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April 22nd, 2009

Happy, Happy, Hubble — Still Hunkerin' Down + Getting The Job Done


To commemorate 19 years of success, the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope has photographed a peculiar system of galaxies known as Arp 194.

Hubble photo of Arp 194 galaxy (NASA / ESA) This interacting group contains several galaxies along with a 'cosmic fountain' of stars, gas, and dust that stretches over 100 000 light-years. Over the past 19 years, Hubble has taken dozens of exotic pictures of galaxies as they collide with each other and have a variety of close encounters of the galactic kind. Just when you thought these interactions could not look any stranger, in this image of a trio of galaxies, called Arp 194, it looks as if one of the galaxies has sprung a leak. The bright blue streamer is really a stretched spiral arm full of newborn blue stars. This typically happens when two galaxies interact and tug at each other gravitationally.

Resembling a pair of owl's eyes, the two nuclei of the colliding galaxies can be seen merging at the upper left. The bizarre blue bridge of material extending out from the northern component looks as if it connects to a third galaxy but in reality this galaxy is in the background and not connected at all. In instances where galaxies superficially appear to overlap, Hubble's sharp view allows astronomers to try and sort out which objects are in the foreground and which are in the background. The blue 'fountain' is the most striking feature of this galaxy troupe and it contains complexes of super star clusters that may have as many as dozens of individual young star clusters in them. It formed as a result of the interactions among the galaxies in the northern component of Arp 194. The gravitational forces involved in a galaxy interaction can enhance the star formation rate and give rise to brilliant bursts of star formation in merging systems.

Hubble's resolution shows clearly that the stream of material lies in front of the southern component of Arp 194, as shown by the dust that is silhouetted around the star cluster complexes. The details of the interactions among the multiple galaxies that make up Arp 194 are complex. The system was most likely disrupted by a previous collision or close encounter. The shapes of all the galaxies involved have been distorted by their gravitational interactions with one another. Arp 194, located in the constellation of Cepheus, resides approximately 600 million light-years away from Earth. It is one of thousands of interacting and merging galaxies known to exist in our nearby Universe. These observations were taken in January 2009 with the Wide Field Planetary Camera 2. Blue, green and red filters were composited together to form this rather picturesque image of a galaxy interaction.