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> Gravitational lenses in Abell 1689 galaxy cluster

Gravitational lenses in Abell 1689 galaxy cluster

author: Nasa/ESA/Stsci/Novapix

reference: a-amg90-00063

Image Size 300 DPI: 33 * 32 cm

This new Hubble image shows galaxy cluster Abell 1689. It combines both visible and infrared data from Hubble’s Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) with a combined exposure time of over 34 hours to reveal this patch of sky in greater and striking detail than in previous observations. This image is peppered with glowing golden clumps, bright stars, and distant, ethereal spiral galaxies. Material from some of these galaxies is being stripped away, giving the impression that the galaxy is dripping, or bleeding, into the surrounding space. Also visible are a number of electric blue streaks, circling and arcing around the fuzzy galaxies in the centre. These streaks are the telltale signs of a cosmic phenomenon known as gravitational lensing. Abell 1689 is so massive that it bends and warps the space around it, affecting how light from objects behind the cluster travels through space. These streaks are the distorted forms of galaxies that lie behind the cluster.

Keywords for this photo:

2013 - ABELL 1689 - ACS - ASTRONOMY - COSMOLOGY - DARK MATTER - DISTANT GALAXIES - GALAXY - GALAXY CLUSTER - GRAVITATIONAL LENS - HST - HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE - STAR - VIRGO -