A place were I can write...
My simple blog of pictures of travel, friends, activities and the Universe we live in as we go slowly around the Sun.
January 17, 2014
Thousand-Ruby Galaxy
Big, bright, and beautiful, spiral galaxy M83 lies a mere
twelve million light-years away, near the southeastern tip of the very long constellation Hydra.
This deep view
of the gorgeous island universe includes observations from Hubble, along
with ground based data from the European Southern Observatory's very large
telescope units, National Astronomical Observatory of Japan's Subaru telescope,
and Australian
Astronomical Observatory photographic data by D. Malin. About 40,000
light-years across, M83 is popularly known as the Southern Pinwheel for its
pronounced spiral arms. But the wealth of reddish star
forming regions found near the edges of the arms' thick dust lanes, also
suggest another popular moniker for M83, the Thousand-Ruby Galaxy. Arcing
near the top of the novel cosmic portrait lies M83's northern stellar tidal stream, debris from the gravitational
disruption of a smaller, merging satellite galaxy. The faint, elusive star
stream was found
in the mid 1990s by enhancing photographic plates.
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