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Image Gallery > Astronomical Images > Galaxies and the Universe > ssc2009-14a

image
NASA/JPL-Caltech/The SINGS Team (SSC/Caltech)

Coiled Creature of the Night

NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope has imaged a wild creature of the dark -- a coiled galaxy with an eye-like object at its center.

The galaxy, called NGC 1097, is located 50 million light-years away. It is spiral-shaped like our Milky Way, with long, spindly arms of stars. The "eye" at the center of the galaxy is actually a monstrous black hole surrounded by a ring of stars. In this color-coded infrared view from Spitzer, the area around the invisible black hole is blue and the ring of stars, white.

The black hole is huge, about 100 million times the mass of our sun, and is feeding off gas and dust along with the occasional unlucky star. Our Milky Way's central black hole is tame in comparison, with a mass of a few million suns.

The ring around the black hole is bursting with new star formation. An inflow of material toward the central bar of the galaxy is causing the ring to light up with new stars.

The galaxy's red spiral arms and the swirling spokes seen between the arms show dust heated by newborn stars. Older populations of stars scattered through the galaxy are blue. The fuzzy blue dot to the left, which appears to fit snuggly between the arms, is a companion galaxy. Astronomers say it is unclear whether this companion poked a hole in the larger galaxy, or just happens to be aligned in a gap in the arms.

Other dots in the picture are either nearby stars in our galaxy, or distant galaxies.

This image was taken during Spitzer's cold mission, before it ran out of liquid coolant. The observatory's warm mission is ongoing, with two infrared channels operating at about 30 Kelvin (minus 406 degrees Fahrenheit).

Infrared light with a wavelength of 3.6 microns is blue; 4.5-micron light is green and 8.0-micron light is red. The contribution from starlight measured at 3.6 microns has been subtracted from the 8.0-micron image to enhance the visibility of the dust features.

To download, choose your preferred resolution and file format below. "High-Resolution" files will always be the highest resolution and widest crop available, intended for print. Other resolutions are provided for convenient on-screen viewing.

Screen-Resolution (600x750) : JPEG (168 KB)
Medium-Resolution (1200x1500) : JPEG (264 KB)
High-Resolution (2400x3000) : JPEG (2.9 MB) | Mac TIFF (6.7 MB)

About the Object (1)
Object name:NGC 1097, Arp 77
Object type:Galaxy
Position (J2000):RA: 02h 46m 19.00s  Dec: -30° 16' 29.00"
Distance:45,000,000 Light Years
Constellation:Fornax
About the Data
Spitzer Data
Image Credit:NASA/JPL-Caltech/The SINGS Team (SSC/Caltech)
Instrument:IRAC
Release Date:2009/07/23

Additional Info
Press Release: NASA's Spitzer Images Out-of-this-World Galaxy

INDIVIDUAL IMAGES

NGC 1097 Unpackaged

Screen-Resolution (750x750): JPEG
High-Resolution (2056x2056): JPEG | Mac TIFF
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech



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