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Bird's Eye View of a Galaxy Collision
What appears as a bird's head, leaning over to snatch
up a tasty meal, is a striking example of a galaxy collision in
NGC 6745. A large spiral galaxy, with its nucleus still intact,
peers at the smaller passing galaxy (nearly out of the field of
view at lower right), while a bright blue beak and bright whitish-blue
top feathers show the distinct path taken during the smaller galaxy's
journey. These galaxies did not merely interact gravitationally
as they passed one another, they actually collided.
When galaxies collide, the stars that normally comprise
the major portion of the luminous mass of each of the two galaxies
will almost never collide with each other, but will pass rather
freely between each other with little damage. This occurs because
the physical size of individual stars is tiny compared to their
typical separations, making the chance of physical encounter relatively
small. In our own Milky Way galaxy, the space between our Sun and
our nearest stellar neighbor, Proxima Centauri (part of the Alpha
Centauri triple system), is a vast 4.3 light-years.
However, the situation is quite different for the
interstellar media in the above two galaxies - material consisting
largely of clouds of atomic and molecular gases and of tiny particles
of matter and dust, strongly coupled to the gas. Wherever the interstellar
clouds of the two galaxies collide, they do not freely move past
each other without interruption but, rather, suffer a damaging collision.
High relative velocities cause ram pressures at the surface of contact
between the interacting interstellar clouds. This pressure, in turn,
produces material densities sufficiently extreme as to trigger star
formation through gravitational collapse. The hot blue stars in
this image are evidence of this star formation.
This image was created by the Hubble Heritage Team
using NASA Hubble Space Telescope archive data taken with the Wide
Field Planetary Camera 2 in March 1996. Members of the science team,
which include Roger Lynds (KPNO/NOAO) and Earl J. O'Neil, Jr. (Steward
Obs.), used infrared, red, visual and ultravoilet filters to image
this galaxy system. Lynds and O'Neil are currently using the Hubble
data along with ground-based radio observations to further study
the interactions within NGC 6745.
Image Credit:
NASA and The Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA)
Acknowledgment: Roger Lynds (KPNO/NOAO)
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