Credit & Copyright: N. Scoville
(Caltech), T. Rector
(U. Alaska, NOAO)
et al., Hubble Heritage Team,
NASA
Explanation:
The Whirlpool Galaxy is a classic spiral galaxy.
At only 30 million
light years distant and fully 60
thousand light years across,
M51, also known as
NGC 5194,
is one of the brightest and most
picturesque galaxies on the sky.
The above image is a digital combination
of a ground-based image from the
0.9-meter telescope at
Kitt Peak National Observatory and a space-based
image from the
Hubble Space Telescope highlighting sharp
features normally too red to be seen.
Anyone with a good pair of
binoculars,
however,
can see this
Whirlpool toward the constellation of Canes Venatici.
M51 is a
spiral galaxy of type Sc and is the dominant member of a
whole group of galaxies.
Astronomers speculate that M51's
spiral structure is
primarily due to its
gravitational interaction with a
smaller galaxy just off the top of this digitally sharpened image.
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Based on Astronomy Picture
Of the Day
Publications with keywords: M 51 - Whirlpool galaxy - spiral galaxy
Publications with words: M 51 - Whirlpool galaxy - spiral galaxy
See also: