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> Barred spiral galaxy NGC 1559 with a supernova

Barred spiral galaxy NGC 1559 with a supernova

author: ESO/Novapix

reference: a-gax15-59001

Image Size 300 DPI: 17 * 13 cm

On the night of August 4, 2005, an amateur astronomer and supernovae discoverer Reverend Robert Evans discovered a supernova just North of this galaxy. This supernova is classified as a somewhat unusual type Ia supernova, caught probably 10 days before it reached its maximum brightness. Such a supernova is thought to be the result of the explosion of a small and dense star - a white dwarf - inside a binary system. As its companion was continuously spilling matter onto the white dwarf, the white dwarf reached a critical mass, leading to a fatal instability. NGC 1559 is a SBc(s)-type spiral galaxy located about 50 million light-years away, that weighs the equivalent of about 10,000 million of suns, and is about 7 times smaller than our Milky Way. Receding from us at a speed of about 1,300 km/s, it is a galaxy of the Seyfert type. Such galaxies are characterized by a bright nucleus that radiates strongly in the blue and in the ultraviolet. Astronomers think that about 2 solar masses of gas per year are transformed into stars in this galaxy. Like most galaxies, NGC 1559 probably contains a black hole in its centre, which should have a mass that is equivalent to 300,000 suns. Colour composite image obtained with the multi-mode FORS1 instrument on ESO's 8.2m VLT. The supernova, SN 2005df, is visible as the bright star just above the galaxy.

Keywords for this photo:

2005 - ASTRONOMY - BARRED SPIRAL GALAXY - BLACK HOLE - GALAXY - KUEYEN - NGC 1559 - RETICULUM - SBc - SEYFERT GALAXY - SN 2005DF - SOUTHERN HEMISPHERE - STAR - STAR FORMATION - SUPERNOVA - TYPE Ia - VERY LARGE TELESCOPE - VLT -