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> Galaxy pair NGC 3314 in Hydra

Galaxy pair NGC 3314 in Hydra

author: NASA/The Hubble Heritage Team/Novapix

reference: a-gax33-14001

Image Size 300 DPI: 19 * 17 cm

Through an extraordinary chance alignment, a face-on spiral galaxy lies precisely in front of another larger spiral. This line-up provides us with the rare chance to visualize dark material within the front galaxy, seen only because it is silhouetted against the object behind it. NGC 3314 lies about 140 million light-years from Earth, in the direction of the southern hemisphere constellation Hydra. The bright blue stars forming a pinwheel shape near the center of the front galaxy have formed recently from interstellar gas and dust. In many galaxies, interstellar dust lies only in the same regions as recently formed blue stars. However, in the foreground galaxy, NGC 3314a, there are numerous additional dark dust lanes that are not associated with any bright young stars. A small, red patch near the center of the image is the bright nucleus of the background galaxy, NGC 3314b. It is reddened for the same reason the setting sun looks red. When light passes through a volume containing small particles (molecules in the Earth's atmosphere or interstellar dust particles in galaxies), its color becomes redder. The Hubble space telescope image of NGC 3314 was constructed from archival images taken in April 1999.

Keywords for this photo:

1999 - 2000 - ASTRONOMY - EVOLUTION - GALAXY - HST - HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE - HYDRA - NGC 3314 - SOUTHERN HEMISPHERE - SPIRAL GALAXY - STAR - STAR FORMATION - WIDE FIELD PLANETARY CAMERA -