CNN: Hubble sees galactic wheel within a wheel (Photo)
By Richard Stenger
(Clearwisdom.net)
(CNN) --A band of bright blue stars encircles a central yellow core in one of
the strangest galaxies observed by the Hubble Space Telescope.
The galaxy is about 120,000 light-years across, slightly larger than our own
Milky Way. The ring is composed of hot young stars, while the interior is packed
with much older, cooler ones.
The dark break between the bright circle and nucleus could actually contain
clusters of stars too dim to detect, Hubble researchers said.
The image captures a face-on view of the galaxy, "revealing more detail than
any existing photo of this object," they said in a statement this week.
"This image may help astronomers unravel clues on how such strange objects
form."
Such star groups can evolve through numerous processes, according to
astronomers. In some cases, one galaxy might pass through another, stoking an
intense period of star births.
Yet this galactic oddity exhibits no sign of a collision with a second
galaxy. Some scientists theorize that the blue star circle is the remnant of a
galaxy that passed close by the central one, some 2 billion or 3 billion years
ago.
In 1950, astronomer Art Hoag first detected the galaxy. Dubbed Hoag's Object,
it is about 600 million light-years away in the constellation Serpens.
The image, which the Hubble's Wide Field and Planetary Camera captured in
July 2001, was released by the Hubble Heritage Team, which is based at NASA's
Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore, Maryland.
Source from:
http://www.cnn.com/2002/TECH/space/09/06/hubble.pinwheel/index.html

This galactic pinwheel around a dense
nucleus is known as Hoag's Object.
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