ESO: A Galaxy on the Edge (NGC 1055)

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ESO: A Galaxy on the Edge (NGC 1055)

Post by bystander » Wed Mar 01, 2017 5:19 pm

A Galaxy on the Edge
ESO Photo Release | 2017 Mar 01
[img3="Credit: ESO/VLT"]https://cdn.eso.org/images/screen/eso1707a.jpg[/img3][hr][/hr]
This colourful stripe of stars, gas, and dust is actually a spiral galaxy named NGC 1055. Captured here by ESO’s Very Large Telescope (VLT), this big galaxy is thought to be up to 15 percent larger in diameter than the Milky Way. NGC 1055 appears to lack the whirling arms characteristic of a spiral, as it is seen edge-on. However, it displays odd twists in its structure that were probably caused by an interaction with a large neighbouring galaxy.

Spiral galaxies throughout the Universe take on all manner of orientations with respect to Earth. We see some from above (as it were) or “face-on” — a good example of this being the whirlpool-shaped galaxy NGC 1232. Such orientations reveal a galaxy’s flowing arms and bright core in beautiful detail, but make it difficult to get any sense of a three-dimensional shape.

We see other galaxies, such as NGC 3521, at angles. While these tilted objects begin to reveal the three-dimensional structure within their spiral arms, fully understanding the overall shape of a spiral galaxy requires an edge-on view — such as this one of NGC 1055.

When seen edge-on, it is possible to get an overall view of how stars — both new patches of starbirth and older populations — are distributed throughout a galaxy, and the “heights” of the relatively flat disc and the star-loaded core become easier to measure. Material stretches away from the blinding brightness of the galactic plane itself, becoming more clearly observable against the darker background of the cosmos. ...
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Ann
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Re: ESO: A Galaxy on the Edge (NGC 1055)

Post by Ann » Thu Mar 02, 2017 11:57 pm

That's a fine picture! :D

The ESO portrait of NGC 1055 is a BVRHα image, which explains why the colors are so good.

Note the delicate bar-double ring background galaxy in the lower right corner.
M77, which is interacting with NGC 1055.
NASA, ESA & A. van der Hoeven.
The surroundings of NGC 1055.
ESO/Digitized Sky Survey 2. Acknowledgement: Davide De Martin




















NGC 1055 is interacting with M77, a face-on spiral galaxy with an active galactic nucleus.

The surroundings of NGC 1055 are interesting. The bright blue star in the picture at right is Delta Cetus, a fourth magnitude star of spectral type B2. NGC 1055 is seen to the left (very slightly upper left) of Delta Cetus. There are two (actually three) smallish differently colored stars located symmetrically above the disk of NGC 1055, giving it the appearance of an alien (or a spaceship) with a pair of antennae!

M77 is seen to the lower left of NGC 1055, looking like a bright oval surrounded by a faint halo.
Slightly cropped image of NGC 1073.
Photo: NASA.
Note the barred, slightly bluish spiral galaxy towards the upper left. That is NGC 1073.

Personally I love this SDSS/Hoggs 1 MB picture of NGC 1073. In this picture, yellow means old stars, blue menas young stars, green means Hα nebulas, smooth areas mean regions dominated by large numbers of small stars, and sharp bright features mean concentrations of bright stars. Note the small bright nucleus!

All these galaxies, NGC 1055, M77 and NGC 1073, are at comparable distances from us. They may therefore interact with one another, and it seems certain that NGC 1055 and M77 are interacting.

Ann
Color Commentator

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