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Astronomy Picture of the Day
Discover the cosmos!
Each day a different image or photograph of our fascinating universe is featured, along with a brief explanation written by a professional astronomer.
2019/06/12
Spiral Galaxy M96 from Hubble
Image credits:
NASA
,
ESA
,
Hubble
;
Processing & Copyright:
Leo Shatz
Explanation:
Dust lanes seem to swirl around the core of Messier 96 in this
colorful, detailed portrait
of the center of a beautiful
island universe
. Of course M96 is a
spiral galaxy
, and counting the faint arms extending
beyond the brighter central region
, it spans 100 thousand light-years or so, making it about the size of our own
Milky Way
. M96, also known as
NGC 3368
, is known to be about 35 million light-years distant and a dominant member of the
Leo I galaxy group
. The
featured image
was taken by the
Hubble Space Telescope
. The reason for
M96
's asymmetry is unclear -- it could have arisen from gravitational interactions with other Leo I
group galaxies
, but the lack of an intra-group diffuse glow seems to indicate
few recent interactions
. Galaxies far in the background can be found by
examining the edges
of the picture.
Authors & editors:
Robert J. nemiroff
(MTU)
&
Jerry T. Bonnell
(UMCP)
Web designed by Simon G. Kupisz, 2020
NASA Official:
Phillip Newman
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at
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/
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&
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