Category Archives: astronomy research

I Can’t Get Enough of Them!

Those Colliding Galaxies

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I know, I know. I showed you one of these a few entries ago. But, I can’t help it. I’m stuck on ’em. Just look at this picture and tell me you aren’t taken with the beauty of two galaxies colliding. And look at all the galaxies in the background!  They’re in all shapes and sizes.

In case you didn’t figure this out already, it’s another gorgeous view from Hubble Space Telescope. It’s of NGC 3256, an object that looks like one galaxy but is actually the aftermath of a collision of two spearate galaxies. There’s a double nucleus here and the two “footlike” smears extending out from either side of the central action are tidal tails chock-full of hot young stars and gas clouds.

Galaxies Can’t Do that, Can They?

It Turns Out They Do… All Over the Place

Back before astronomers had high-resolution cameras and spectrographs and orbiting spacecraft to look at the distant universe, interacting galaxies were just plain weird. They didn’t fit into the standard scheme of galaxies as set out by the venerable giant of astronomy, Edwin Hubble. Every astronomer worth his (and sometimes a few “her”) salt memorized the Hubble tuning fork diagram and tried to fit every galaxy observed somewhere in this hierarchy.

Trouble is, not all galaxies “played the game.” Some of them looked downright pathological, twisted up, or misshapen or something. But the problem was that until we could look at these galactic weirdos with good optics and high-resolution spectrographs, astronomers couldn’t really tell what was going on with many of them.

That’s why the monumental set of galaxies that Hubble Space Telescope and other high-resolution ground-based observatories have observed over the years is such a great achievement. For the first time, astronomers can see what’s happening. And, they’re finding galaxy interactions (collisions, if you will) all over the place. The fact that we’re seeing them nearly everywhere we point a telescope to tells us that collisions aren’t just oddball occurrences in the universe. They’re part of an evolutionary process that shapes galaxies and triggers star formation in the process.

Our own Milky Way is actually cannibalizing smaller galaxies as you read this. The Sloan Digital Sky Survey is tracing out the streams of stars that are pouring into our galaxy as these smaller galaxies interact with the Milky Way. Here’s what it looks like from our vantage point inside the Milky Way.

Galaxy interaction is a hot topic in astronomy these days as the folks researching these cosmically titanic events dig into the details. Stay tuned!