A cosmic embrace

In this image, two spiral galaxies, similar in looks to the Milky Way, are participating in a cosmic ballet, which, in a few billion years, will end up in a complete galactic merger — the two galaxies will become a single, bigger one.

Located about 150 million light-years away in the constellation of Canis Major (the Great Dog), NGC 2207 — the larger of the two — and its companion, IC 2163, form a magnificent pair. English astronomer John Herschel discovered them in 1835.

The fatal gravitational attraction of NGC 2207 is already wreaking havoc throughout its smaller partner, distorting IC 2163’s shape and flinging out stars and gas into long streamers that extend over 100,000 light-years. The space between the individual stars in a galaxy is so vast, however, that when these galaxies collide, virtually none of the stars in them will actually physically smash into each other.

This image was captured with the ESO Faint Object Spectrograph and Camera (EFOSC2) through three wide band filters (B, V, R). EFOSC2 has a 4.1 x 4.1 arcminute field of view and is attached to the 3.6-metre telescope at ESO’s La Silla Observatory in Chile.

Kredit:

ESO

O snímku

Id:ngc2207
Typ:Pozorování
Datum zveřejnění:3. prosince 2009 23:18
Velikost:1995 x 2005 px

O objektu

Jméno:IC 2163, NGC 2207
Typ:Local Universe : Galaxy : Type : Spiral
Vzdálenost:150 milion světelné roky
Constellation:Canis Major
Kategorie:Galaxies

Image Formats


Pozadí

1024x768
180,0 KB
1280x1024
321,6 KB
1600x1200
532,6 KB
1920x1200
715,2 KB
2048x1536
821,2 KB

Souřadnice

Position (RA):6 16 22.14
Position (Dec):-21° 22' 23.25"
Field of view:5.23 x 5.26 arcminutes
Orientace:Sever je 1.8° pravá od svislé osy

Barvy & filtry

PásmoVlnová délkaDalekohled
Optický
B
440 nmESO 3.6-metre telescope
EFOSC2
Optický
V
547 nmESO 3.6-metre telescope
EFOSC2
Optický
R
643 nmESO 3.6-metre telescope
EFOSC2