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This page will consist of images connected
with the space age. They will be drawn from NASA, the Hubble telescope
and personally scanned images.
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From the archives of the Hubble Telescope
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This stellar swarm is M80 (NGC 6093), one of the densest of
the 147 known globular star clusters in the Milky Way galaxy.
Located about 28,000 light-years from Earth, M80 contains
hundreds of thousands of stars, all held together by their mutual
gravitational attraction. Globular clusters are particularly useful
for studying stellar evolution, since all of the stars in the cluster
have the same age (about 15 billion years), but cover a range of
stellar masses. Every star visible in this image is either more
highly evolved than, or in a few rare cases more massive than,
our own Sun. Especially obvious are the bright red giants, which
are stars similar to the Sun in mass that are nearing the ends of
their lives.
By analyzing the Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2)
images, including images taken through an ultraviolet filter,
astronomers have found a large population of "blue stragglers" in
the core of the cluster. These stars appear to be unusually young
and more massive than the other stars in a globular cluster.
However, stellar collisions can occur in dense stellar regions like
the core of M80 and, in some cases, the collisions can result in
the merger of two stars. This produces an unusually massive
single star, which mimics a normal, young star. M80 was
previously unknown to contain blue stragglers, but is now
known to contain more than twice as many as any other globular
cluster surveyed with NASA's Hubble Space Telescope (HST).
Based on the number of blue stragglers, the stellar collision rate
in the core of M80 appears to be exceptionally high.
M80 is also unusual because it was the site of a nova explosion
in the year 1860. Nova outbursts occur when a close
companion star transfers fresh hydrogen fuel to a burned-out
white dwarf. Eventually the hydrogen ignites a thermonuclear
explosion on the surface of the white dwarf, giving rise to the
nova outburst. The ultraviolet Hubble observations have
revealed the hot, faint remnant of this exploding star, which was
named T Scorpii in the 19th century. Curiously, however, the
WFPC2 observations have revealed only two other nova-like
close binary stars in M80, far fewer than expected theoretically
based on the stellar collision rate.
So the blue stragglers in M80 seem to indicate that there are lots
of collisions, yet the nova-like stars suggest only a few.
Sometimes life for astronomers isn't so simple, but it is from
exploring discrepancies like this that our understanding
eventually deepens.
Exciting Hubble Space Telescope images of more than a dozen
very distant colliding galaxies indicate that, at least in some
cases, big massive galaxies form through collisions between
smaller ones, in a "generation after generation" never-ending
story.
The Hubble image shows the paired galaxies very close together
with streams of stars being pulled out of the galaxies. the
colliding "parent" galaxies lose their shape and smoother galaxies
are formed. The whole merging process can take less than a
billion years.
The Hubble Space Telescope imaged 81 galaxies in the galaxy
cluster 8 billion light-years away. Astronomers say the collisions
have never been observed before at this frequency. Many of the
collisions involve very massive galaxies, and the end result will
be even more massive galaxies.
Spiral Galaxy
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