The soft glow in this image is NGC 2768, an elliptical galaxy located in the
northern constellation of Ursa Major (The Great Bear). NGC 2768 appears here as
a bright oval on the sky, surrounded by a wide, fuzzy cloud of
material.
This image, taken by the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, shows
the dusty structure encircling the center of the galaxy, forming a knotted ring
around the galaxy’s brightly glowing middle. Interestingly, this ring lies
perpendicular to the plane of NGC 2768 itself, stretching up and out of the
galaxy.
The dust in NGC 2768 forms an intricate network of knots and
filaments. In the center of the galaxy are two tiny, S-shaped symmetric jets.
These two flows of material travel outwards from the galactic center along
curved paths, and are masked by the tangle of dark dust lanes that spans the
body of the galaxy.
These jets are a sign of a very active center. NGC
2768 is an example of a Seyfert galaxy, an object with a supermassive black hole
at its center. This speeds up and sucks in gas from the nearby space, creating a
stream of material swirling inwards towards the black hole known as an accretion
disk. This disk throws off material in very energetic outbursts, creating
structures like the jets seen in the image above.
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