|   | 
Credit & Copyright: A. Fabian 
(IoA Cambridge) et al., 
NASA 
 
Explanation:
Throughout the Universe, galaxies 
tend to swarm in groups 
ranging from just a handful of members to casts of thousands. 
 
Astronomers have realized since the early 1970s that 
the larger swarms, immense 
clusters of galaxies millions of 
light-years across, are immersed 
within tenuous clouds of hot gas which glow strongly in x-rays. 
 
 
These clouds may have been heated by their collapse 
in the early Universe, but in many 
galaxy clusters, 
the gas appears to be cooling. 
 
This Chandra Observatory 
x-ray image reveals a striking 
cooling flow 
in the central regions of the 
galaxy 
cluster 
cataloged 
as Abell 1795. 
 
Brighter pixels in the false-color image represent higher x-ray 
intensities. 
 
The bright filament down the center indicates gas condensing and 
cooling -- rapidly 
loosing energy by radiating x-rays. 
 
At the very top of the filament is a 
large, x-ray bright galaxy. 
 
As it moved through the 
cluster gas cloud, the massive galaxy's gravitational 
influence seems to have created this cosmic wake of denser, 
cooling gas. 
 
Continuing to cool, the cluster gas will ultimately 
provide raw material to form future generations of stars. 
 
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Based on Astronomy Picture
Of the Day
Publications with keywords: cluster - galaxy cluster - intracluster gas - abell 1795
Publications with words: cluster - galaxy cluster - intracluster gas - abell 1795
See also:
