NGC 660 is featured in this cosmic
snapshot, a sharp composite of broad and narrow band filter image data from
the Gemini North telescope on Mauna Kea. Over 20
million light-years away and swimming within the boundaries of the constellation
Pisces, NGC 660's peculiar appearance marks it as a
polar ring galaxy. A rare galaxy type, polar ring galaxies have a
substantial population of stars, gas, and dust orbiting
in rings
nearly perpendicular to the plane of the galactic disk. The bizarre-looking
configuration could have been caused by the chance capture of material from
a passing galaxy by a disk galaxy, with the captured debris eventually strung
out in a rotating ring. The violent gravitational interaction would account for
the myriad pinkish star forming regions scattered along NGC 660's ring. The polar ring
component can also be used to explore the shape of the galaxy's otherwise
unseen dark matter
halo by calculating the dark
matter's gravitational influence on the rotation of the ring and disk.
Broader than the disk, NGC 660's ring spans over 50,000 light-years.
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