Credit & Copyright: NASA,
ESA,
A. Riess
(STScI/JHU),
L. Macri
(Texas A & M Univ.)
et al.,
Hubble Heritage
(STScI/AURA)
Explanation:
Big,
beautiful NGC 5548
is more that 50,000 light-years across
and lies 72 million light-years away toward the constellation
Virgo.
The winding spiral arms of this gorgeous
island universe are loaded with
luminous young star clusters and dark dust lanes.
Still, for earthbound astronomers NGC 5548 is not just
another pretty face-on spiral galaxy.
Home to some
250
Cepheid variable stars and a recent
Type Ia
supernova explosion, key objects for
astronomical distance determinations,
NGC 5548 is one of 8 galaxies used in a new study that includes
additional Hubble Space Telescope observations
to improve the measurement of
Hubble's Constant -
the expansion rate of the Universe.
The results
of the study lend weight to the theory that
dark energy really is responsible
for accelerating the expansion of the Universe,
restricting models that try to explain the observed acceleration without
the mysterious dark energy.
In this sharp Hubble image
of NGC 5548, many of the small reddish smudges
are distant background galaxies.
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NASA Official: Jay Norris. Specific rights apply.
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& Michigan Tech. U.
Based on Astronomy Picture
Of the Day
Publications with keywords: spiral galaxy - hubble constant - distance scale - cosmology
Publications with words: spiral galaxy - hubble constant - distance scale - cosmology
See also: