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Alan Boyle covers the physical sciences, anthropology, technological innovation and space science and exploration for MSNBC.com. He is a winner of the AAAS Science Journalism Award, the NASW Science-in-Society Award and other honors; a contributor to "A Field Guide for Science Writers"; and a member of the board of the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing.

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A smashing view from Hubble

Posted: Tuesday, October 13, 2009 4:00 AM by Alan Boyle


A. Evans / Stony Brook U. / NASA / ESA
Click for video: A Hubble image shows two galaxies merging into one beautiful
mess known as NGC 2623. Click on the image to watch a "Hubblecast" video.

Long ago, a galaxy far away smashed into another galaxy - creating a beautiful, terrible knot of cosmic chaos. The view of that galactic collision, captured by the Hubble Space Telescope, serves as a preview of what might well happen when the Andromeda Galaxy slams into our Milky Way galaxy billions of years from now.

The picture from Hubble, released today, shows the mighty crash of two galaxies similar to the Milky Way, but 250 million light-years away in the constellation Cancer. The weird-looking, two-tailed result is known as NGC 2623 or Arp 243.

Scientists say NGC 2623 appears to be in the late stages of a galactic merger. The supermassive black holes at the center of the two original galaxies have combined to form a super-energetic nucleus. The energy released by the clash has sparked the formation of large star clusters much brighter than the brightest clusters we see in our own celestial neighborhood.

The stars shine particularly brightly in the long tidal tails that were thrown off during the collision. Each of those tails is roughly 65,000 to 80,000 light-years long, which comes close to rivaling the width of the Milky Way's main disk.

Aaron Evans, an astronomer at the University of Virginia at Charlottesville who led the observational team, said NGC 2623's burst of starbirth has been going on for a long time. "If we assume the oldest star clusters that are extremely bright were formed at the beginning of the interaction, the age would be around 100 million years," he told me.

The star clusters, which show up as sparks of blue in the Hubble image, were likely shocked into existence as a result of the galactic collision. "The stars themselves don't actually touch, but what does happen is that the gas in the galaxies is affected gravitationally by the interaction," Evans explained.

Looking at luminous galaxies
Evans and his colleagues came across the smash-up in the course of conducting a survey of luminous infrared galaxies, which are called LIRGs for short. The survey, which draws upon imagery from the Hubble, Chandra and Spitzer space telescopes as well as the Galaxy Evolution Explorer, is known by yet another acronym (GOALS, which stands for Great Observatories All-sky LIRG Survey). Data from the European Space Agency's XMM-Newton satellite contributed to the NGC 2623 study.

"The main reason why we chose this galaxy is that it had this spectacular region of star formation off the nucleus," Evans said. The region was so spectacular that the team wrote a research paper about it, which was published more than a year ago in The Astrophysical Journal. An overview of the GOALS observations appeared in the June issue of the Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific.

Evans explained that the goal of GOALS is to understand the processes that cause galaxies to light up. More than 200 galaxies have been sampled so far. "The sample as a whole is essentially designed so we can get snapshots of these varous galaxies as they're merging," Evans said.

One of the things that distinguishes NGC 2623 from most of the other galaxies is that the emissions from its central black hole appears to be relatively weak, considering the level of star formation that's being observed.

Galactic crash scenes rank among the most popular pictures produced by Hubble: This year's "people's choice" for Hubble observations was a tangled-up double-galaxy called Arp 274. Yet another assortment of interacting galaxies, known as Stephan's Quintet, was among the first pictures unveiled after the space telescope's upgrade. (The NGC 2623 image data was collected by Hubble's Advanced Camera for Surveys before it went on the blink in 2007.)

Beautiful ... from a distance
Such collisions may look divine from a distance, but you wouldn't want to be in the middle of one. Astronomers say that's what's likely to happen right here in the Milky Way 3 billion to 4 billion years from now. The nearby Andromeda Galaxy is currently on a collision course, approaching us at a speed of more than 300,000 mph, or 500,000 kilometers per hour. (Note to self: Arrange to be somewhere else in 3 billion years.)

If anyone is still hanging around the Milky Way at that time, they wouldn't necessarily be hit by Andromedan flotsam or jetsam. But they would see a sky fairly crackling with newborn stars and exploding with blasts of ultraviolet radiation. It wouldn't be a pretty sight. 

"Yeah, that would be very bad," Evans agreed.

"In terms of star formation in our galaxy triggered by the Milky Way - Andromeda merger, the real danger to us is having a massive star go supernova in our vicinity," he said in a follow-up e-mail.

So 250 million light-years is just about the right distance from which to appreciate the cosmic mayhem. Here are links to still more galactic crash scenes:


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Comments

Excellent article Alan!  Galaxy mergers do look great from a distance.  It's awesome how the scientists are using different viewing platforms to merge their pictures together to extract more data from space.  Glad to see themn learn new things that they pass along to us.
I never get tired of seeing images like these.  I am glad Hubble is back and better than ever.  With all this going on in space, one just can't help to feel very insignificant.
this is a lame video!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
This is  a very interesting story thank you for sharing it with every body.
To the extent I can grasp what is happening in this photograph, I am truly humbled.
Great story, great pic. I wonder what it looks like out there today. Thanks Alan.
Really makes you appreciate the basics of Physics, doesn't it?  I congratulate you on avoiding the "collision" term and emphasizing "merger".  Considering the space between stars the whole thing is an inter-penetration and merger as opposed to two cars head-on.

Keep up the good work and thanks for the intellectual stimulation.
If it's possible for "a galaxy far away smashed into another galaxy" then why not to admit that "Aliens live in our Earth's atmosphere".
To prove their existence I went to UFO PA MUFON conference. Jonh Ventre, director of PA MUFON, did a great job in organizing this UFO conference. People who saw AFOs (Aliens Flying Object) in the night sky under my guidance are 5 UFO field investigators,(Michael A. Melton one of them),  one chief investigator  from PA MUFON, Jonh Ventre, well-known Ufologists,etc - at UFO conference (Montgomery county community College on 10/09/2009). Be one of them.  
do aliens exsist and will the earth really end in 20012?
I can't believe hacks like you still promote the lies about black holes. They don't exist. 99% of the matter in the universe is plasma (not dark matter, another joke). Why don't you tell them about how electromagnetic forces are billions of times stronger than gravity. Its time to trash Newton and Einstein and get with the Electric Universe, or at least have a debate. Oh wait, all the real scientists have been excommunicated by the Vatican Big Bang Virgin Mary Sex Theorists.
Aliens huh.
I'm up there with Wade, "merger" is more accurate if less spectacular. The results are spectacular when the gas and dust clouds interact, but far less so when it comes to the stars. For the most part the stars pass between each other, and only in formations are they usually affected enough to show altered orbits. Billions of years ago the Milky Way merged with a smaller galaxy. Some residuals are seen around the edge of the Milky Way, but there are also some clumps of stars that show unusual orbits within the Milky Way, indicating their external origin. One of them oscillates above and below (which is which?) the galactic equator as it revolves around the center. That star is Sol -- we are the aliens.
Might not stars in our galaxy be pulled off course and head toward our solar system? Couldn't Andromeda stars getting too close do the same thing? Even if the Earth's orbit were just distorted, I would think we'd have a serious problem. From what I've read, though, we will have been fried by an expanding Sun  several billion years before Andromeda collides with us (unless we move the Earth out, as some have suggested).

Over the last several decades, I've begun to really understand that the universe has plenty of cataclysmic events and that there arn't any guarantees. I'm not complaining though: the universe has been good to me.
" I congratulate you on avoiding the "collision" term and emphasizing "merger"."

Second that. Galactic 'collisions' bring entirely the wrong thing to mind for many people (asteroid events and the like). When these objects come together, in addition to being excruciatingly slow, while the supermassive black holes at each galaxy's center may eventually meet, individual stars and their planets are not colliding. with each other.

"If it's possible for "a galaxy far away smashed into another galaxy" then why not to admit that "Aliens live in our Earth's atmosphere". "

Um, because observations of galactic mergers are easily reproducible and UFO sightings are not?

That was not exactly the smoothest segue I've ever read...

Wonderful sight, and sure hope to have moved to another section of the Univeres by that time the Milkyway and Andromeda collide

Meet you on the next World and Dont be late

PS


Where did the Vatican and Aliens come into this

By the way. The Vatican supports the big bang theory and evolution. Even if there were aliens. It was all a divine power

It is various other Christian churches that dont. If you didnt know there are many of observatories operated by various RC orders. One very well known brother.Geo Brian who has written many of books on astrophysic. Part of the Astonomy and Science division at the Vatican


No you facts before you rant
I have to ask the same thing as Melm. I've read that while the Sun won't turn into a red giant for several billions of years, that we are close enough to the inner edge of the habitable zone (where liquid water can exist on Earth's surface) that Earth will be uninhabitable within one billion years.

Support space exploration so we can seed Earth life on many worlds! Yes this is a lofty goal, but you have to start somewhere.
Far out . . . . . . ..
The most fantastic, gigantic, collossal hoaxes or
frauds or cons in the history of mankind are:
1. Invention of Gods and Religions (not a shred of
  proof, evidence or logic!)
2. The recent global Economic Recession (where have
  the trillions of dollars disappeared to?)
3. The Big Bang Theory (not a shred of scientific
  proof, evidence or mathematical logic!)

Dear Anna Huber, yes they exist and yes the end is coming in 2012, probably caused by said aliens.  If I were you I would live life as fully as possible and pray the aliens don't decide to extermenate us earlier.  Seriously if you are smart enough to take this warning find yourself a deep cellar and start stockpiling canned food and bottled water now.
The structure of the galaxies closely reasemble that of typical matter.
We exist as the top parisites on our atom.
Or do we?
The picture from Hubble, what a wonderfull creation,
has given us the insite to see back in time or even into the future.
Use this knowlage we must, and to survive we will.
We are all just a spin in time. But then again what is time?
 My hat is off to the dreamers.  
nice pics.. But, how does it enhance the Cash for Clunker, or some other, in near future proposed programs by our Congress and this woderful guy in WH? Can Obama enhance the collision so we do not need to wait billions years to experience one? Do we have enough money to do that?
More science-fiction writing, masquerading as fact.  Good grief.
is this guy from a galaxy far far away or what.how do you come across all these projections about how old these things are"oh there about 100.000.000 million years old according to my statistics" good guess.he must be like the guy on "NUMBERS"this goes into this,this cross divided to this,this carries over to this ,divided by this,rounded by the third power.+/- into this and minus three.and there you go,easy as pie.........wow...  
Great video. Have been a fan of Hubble since it was originally put into service. I live on the Space coast so lots of info locally. Aliens do live in some people's minds...lol...especially if manic-depressive and on cymbalta. The data on black holes is being taught in Science class at the "intro to" level. 101...not for those who spend their time watching the toon network or playing video games. Unless of course you think with both sides of the brain. Also its 2010, the Maya calender just starts anew not Hollywood movie sensationalism apocolimpse....lol
It is fascinating to read the minds of all the above writers..the opinions that are borne in their minds..this is what makes earthlings so interesting..their minds..so sure they know everything..yet so sure no one else can know anything different.. no black holes, yet what is in that mind?..just thinking after reading the above notes..
katje, in Amherst, va. October 14, 2009
It's great to meet folks who have ideas and aren't afraid to discuss them. I too think we need to set our sights on developing humanity on other worlds, starting with our own solar system and eventually working outward. Perhaps one day Earthfolks will mature enough, mentally to cooperate with one another.


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