Cores of two merging galaxies prepare for final cataclysmic collision
Washington, March 17 (ANI): A new image from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope offers a rare view of an imminent collision between the cores of two merging galaxies, each powered by a black hole with millions of times the mass of the sun.
The galactic cores are in a single, tangled galaxy called NGC 6240, located 400-million light years away in the constellation Ophiuchus.
Millions of years ago, each core was the dense center of its own galaxy before the two galaxies collided and ripped each other apart.
Now, these cores are approaching each other at tremendous speeds and preparing for the final cataclysmic collision.
They will crash into each other in a few million years, a relatively short period on a galactic timescale.
It combines visible light from NASA's Hubble Space Telescope and infrared light from Spitzer.
It catches the two galaxies during a rare, short-lived phase of their evolution, when both cores of the interacting galaxies are still visible but closing in on each other fast.
"One of the most exciting things about the image is that this object is unique," said Stephanie Bush of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Cambridge, and Massachusetts.
"Merging is a quick process, especially when you get to the train wreck that is happening. There just aren't many galactic mergers at this stage in the nearby universe," she added.
NGC 6240 is already putting out huge amounts of infrared light, an indication that a burst of star formation is underway.
The extra infrared radiation is common in interacting galaxies. As the two galaxies interact, dust and gas swept up by the collision form a burst of new stars that give off infrared light.
Such galaxies are called luminous infrared galaxies.
Spitzer's infrared array camera can image the extra heat from newly formed stars, even though their visible light is obscured by thick dust clouds around them.
The blob-like shape of the galaxy is due to the sustained violence of the collision.
Streams of millions of stars are being ripped off the galaxy, forming wispy "tidal tails" that lead off NGC 6240 in several directions.
But, things are about to get even more violent as the main event approaches and the two galactic cores meld into one.
In the center of NGC 6240, the two black holes in the cores will whip up a frenzy of radiation as they careen towards one another head-on, likely transforming the galaxy into a monster known as an ultra-luminous infrared galaxy, thousands of times as bright in infrared as our Milky Way. (ANI)
-
Thunderstorm Warning In Delhi NCR: IMD Issues Orange Alert Amid Sudden Weather Shift -
UP STF Nabs Maulana Abdullah Salim Over Controversial Comment On CM Yogi's Mother -
Masood Azhar’s Brother Mohammad Tahir Dies In Pakistan Under Mysterious Circumstances, Cause Yet To Be Known -
VerSe Innovation Appoints P.R. Ramesh as Independent Director and Chair of Audit Committee to Strengthen Governance Ahead of Next Phase of Growth -
“Not Going To Be There Too Much Longer”: Trump Signals Endgame In Iran War -
Iran Threatens To Hit US Companies in Region From April 1, Names Microsoft, Apple, Tesla, Boeing -
‘IPL Official’ Found Dead in Mumbai Hotel, Probe Underway -
Leander Paes To Contest West Bengal Assembly Elections 2026? Tennis Star Joins BJP Ahead of Assembly Polls -
April 1 Rule Changes: PAN, New Tax Law, ATM, FASTag, Cards to Impact Millions, What’s Changing? -
China, Pakistan Call for Immediate Ceasefire in Iran War, Push Peace Talks ‘As Soon As Possible’ -
Iran’s New Hormuz Plan Targets Global Shipping with Tolls, What Does It Mean? -
Are Banks Closed or Open Today on Mahavir Jayanti? RBI Issues Special March 31 Instructions












Click it and Unblock the Notifications