Astronomy Picture of the Day |
APOD: 1999 November 21 - Elliptical Galaxy NGC 4881 in Coma
Explanation:
Elliptical galaxies are unlike spiral galaxies
and hence unlike our own Milky Way Galaxy.
The giant elliptical galaxy
named NGC 4881 on the upper left lies at the edge of the giant
Coma Cluster of Galaxies.
Elliptical galaxies are ellipsoidal in shape, contain no
spiral arms,
contain little interstellar gas or
dust,
and are found mostly in rich clusters of galaxies.
Elliptical galaxies appear
typically yellow-red, as opposed to
spirals which have spiral arms that appear quite blue.
Much speculation continues on
how each type of galaxy can form,
on whether ellipticals can evolve from colliding
spirals,
or spirals can be created from colliding ellipticals, or both.
Besides the spiral galaxy on the right, all other images in
this picture are of galaxies that lie well behind the Coma Cluster.
APOD: 1999 November 3 - M32: Blue Stars in an Elliptical Galaxy
Explanation:
Elliptical galaxies
are known for their old, red stars. But is this old
elliptical up to new tricks?
In recent years, the centers of
elliptical galaxies
have been found to emit unexpectedly high amounts of blue and
ultraviolet light.
Most blue light from
spiral galaxies originates from
massive young hot stars,
in contrast to the red light from the old cool stars
thought to compose ellipticals.
In the
above recently released, false-color photograph by the
Hubble Space Telescope,
the center of nearby dwarf elliptical M32 has actually been
resolved and does indeed show thousands of bright blue stars.
The
answer is probably that
these blue stars are also old and glow blue, reaching relatively
high temperatures by the
advanced process of
fusing helium, rather than
hydrogen, in their cores.
M32 appears in many pictures
as the companion galaxy to the massive
Andromeda Galaxy (M31).
APOD: 1995 September 13 - Elliptical Galaxy M87
Explanation:
Elliptical galaxy M87 is a type of
galaxy that looks much different
than our own
Milky Way Galaxy. But even for an
elliptical galaxy M87 is peculiar.
M87 is much bigger than an average
galaxy, appears at the center of a whole cluster of galaxies known as the
Virgo Cluster, and shows a very high number of
globular clusters.
These globular clusters are visible as faint
spots surrounding the bright center of M87. In general, elliptical galaxies
contain similar numbers of stars as
spiral galaxies, but are ellipsoidal in
shape (spirals are mostly flat), have no spiral structure, and little
gas and
dust.
This picture is number sixty on a publicly posted list of
images from the
Anglo-Australian
Telescope (AAT).
Authors & editors:
Robert
Nemiroff
(MTU)
& Jerry Bonnell (USRA)
NASA Technical Rep.:
Jay Norris.
Specific rights apply.
A service of:
LHEA at
NASA/
GSFC
&
Michigan Tech. U.