Home In The Cosmos

Stargazing is one of those activities that seems to kindle a lot of deep thoughts about … well, life, the universe, and everything (to quote a well-known phrase). It’s sometimes easy to lose sight of those deeper questions in our daily lives, as we rush from here to there, do our work, enjoy our families, and so on. But, occasionally we do have to step outside and just look up—and be reminded of the larger cosmos.

I’ve been working on several huge writing and editing projects for some observatory clients, and I am astounded at the complexity of running an observatory. Here are these places that look OUT on the sky, giving us deep looks into space and across time. Yet, they’re very human places to be. People get paid to look across space, and to maintain the equipment that does so. The money goes to support families, economies, and whole professions of people devoted to studying the cosmos.

Think about that the next time you’re out under the stars, thinking about how alone we are in the cosmos. We may be so; but a lot of folks here on Earth are doing an astounding job of bringing the cosmos closer to us using some of the most amazing technology ever to arise.

Cosmic Galaxy Ballet

Courtesy the Very Large Telescope
Courtesy the Very Large Telescope

As astronomers gaze across the deeps of space and time, they run across scenes like this one — where two (or more) galaxies just get too close to each other for comfort. When this happens, sometimes galaxies end up colliding.

The European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope caught a glimpse of a cosmic tango taking place 190 million light-years away in the direction of the southern hemisphere constellation Pavo, the Peacock. And, like Hubble’s spectacular image of a ring galaxy (created by yet another collision), this VLT image was taken to celebrate another telescopic anniversary — the VLT’s fifth birthday.

So what’s happening in this scene?

NGC 6769 (the one on the upper right) is a spiral galaxy with very tightly wound spiral arms. Its neighbor (NGC 6770) has two major spiral arms. One looks rather straight and points towards the outer disc of NGC 6769. NGC 6770 is also peculiar because it shows two comparatively straight dark lanes and a fainter arc that curves towards the third galaxy toward the bottom of the image, called NGC 6771 (below). Stars and gas have been stripped off of both NGC 6769 and NGC 6770, and they’re starting to form a common envelope around them. Some folks have suggested it looks like the shape of a Devil’s Mask. There might also be a tenuous bridge between NGC 6769 and NGC 6771. All of these features are there because there’s strong gravitational interaction between the three galaxies.

Well, you might think that such a collision would destroy the galaxies and any chances for the normal things that galaxies do (like host star-forming regions).

Not… quite…

There is a true baby-star boom going on in this scene. A cosmic catastrophe like this one normally results in the formation of many new stars, which you can see in the blueish clouds that highlight the spiral arms in NGC 6769 and NGC 6770. There are many sites of star-forming regions.

VLT, and other telescopes (including HST) are studying a great many cosmic collisions like this one to help scientists figure out how and why galaxies form, evolve, and change over time. There’ll no doubt be more cool pix like this one in the years to come!

Exploring Science and the Cosmos

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