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Credit & Copyright: ESA/Hubble &    
NASA    
 
Explanation:
Why is there a bright line on the sky?   
   
What is pictured above is actually a disk    
galaxy being seen almost perfectly edge on.   
   
The image from the    
Hubble Space Telescope    
is a spectacular visual reminder of just how    
thin    
disk    
galaxies can be.     
   
NGC 4762, a galaxy in the nearby    
Virgo Cluster of Galaxies,    
is so thin that it is actually    
difficult to determine what type of disk galaxy it is.     
   
Its lack of a visible dust lane indicates that it is a low-dust    
lenticular galaxy, although   
it is still possible that a view from on top would reveal spiral structure.   
   
The unusual stellar line spans about 100,000    
light years from end to end.   
   
Near NGC 4762's center is a slight bulge of stars, while    
many background galaxies    
are visible far in the distance.     
   
Galaxies that appear this thin are rare mostly because our Earth must reside   
(nearly) in the extrapolated    
planes of their thin galactic disks.     
   
Galaxies that actually are this thin are relatively common -- for example   
our own    
Milky Way Galaxy is thought to be about this    
thin.    
   
     
 Astrophysicists:    
Browse 900+ codes in the Astrophysics Source Code Library 
   
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NASA Official: Jay Norris. Specific rights apply.
A service of: LHEA at NASA / GSFC
& Michigan Tech. U.
Based on Astronomy Picture
Of the Day
Publications with keywords: edge-on
Publications with words: edge-on
See also:
