File:NGC1277 NGC1278 - HST - Potw1812a.tiff
Originaldatei (3.954 × 1.988 Pixel, Dateigröße: 13,61 MB, MIME-Typ: image/tiff)
Bildtexte
Beschreibung
[Bearbeiten]BeschreibungNGC1277 NGC1278 - HST - Potw1812a.tiff |
English: A red, metal-rich relic
A red, metal-rich relic
This idyllic scene, packed with glowing galaxies, has something truly remarkable at its core: an untouched relic of the ancient Universe. This relic can be seen in the large galaxy at the centre of the frame, a lenticular galaxy named NGC 1277. This galaxy is a member of the famous Perseus Cluster — one of the most massive objects in the known Universe, located some 220 million light-years from Earth. NGC 1277 has been dubbed a “relic of the early Universe” because all of its stars appear to have formed about 12 billion years ago. To put this in perspective, the Big Bang is thought to have happened 13.8 billion years ago. Teeming with billions of old, metal-rich stars, this galaxy is also home to many ancient globular clusters: spherical bundles of stars that orbit a galaxy like satellites. Uniquely, the globuar clusters of NGC 1277 are mostly red and metal-rich — very different to the blue, metal-poor clusters usually seen around similarly-sized galaxies. In astronomy, a metal is any element heavier than hydrogen and helium; these heavier elements are fused together in the hot cores of massive stars and scattered throughout the Universe when these stars explode as they die. In this way, a star’s metal content is related to its age: stars that form later contain greater amounts of metal-rich material, since previous generations of stars have enriched the cosmos from which they are born. Massive galaxies — and their globular clusters — are thought to form in two phases: first comes an early collapse accompanied by a giant burst of star formation, which forms red, metal-rich clusters, followed by a later accumulation of material, which brings in bluer, metal-poor material. The discovery of NGC 1277’s red clusters confirms that the galaxy is a genuine antique that bypassed this second phase, raising important questions for scientists on how galaxies form and evolve: a hotly debated topic in modern astronomy. Link: NASA/STScI release Credit: NASA, ESA, and M. Beasley (Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias) |
Datum | 19 March 2018, 06:00 (release) |
Quelle | https://www.spacetelescope.org/images/potw1811a/ |
Urheber | Credit: NASA, ESA, A. Riess (STScI/JHU) |
Lizenz
[Bearbeiten]ESA/Hubble images, videos and web texts are released by the ESA under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license and may on a non-exclusive basis be reproduced without fee provided they are clearly and visibly credited. Detailed conditions are below; see the ESA copyright statement for full information. For images created by NASA or on the hubblesite.org website, or for ESA/Hubble images on the esahubble.org site before 2009, use the {{PD-Hubble}} tag.
Conditions:
Notes:
|
- Dieses Werk darf von dir
- verbreitet werden – vervielfältigt, verbreitet und öffentlich zugänglich gemacht werden
- neu zusammengestellt werden – abgewandelt und bearbeitet werden
- Zu den folgenden Bedingungen:
- Namensnennung – Du musst angemessene Urheber- und Rechteangaben machen, einen Link zur Lizenz beifügen und angeben, ob Änderungen vorgenommen wurden. Diese Angaben dürfen in jeder angemessenen Art und Weise gemacht werden, allerdings nicht so, dass der Eindruck entsteht, der Lizenzgeber unterstütze gerade dich oder deine Nutzung besonders.
Bildnotizen InfoField | Diese Datei ist annotiert: Betrachte diese auf Commons. |
NGC 1277
NGC 1278
PGC 12430
Dateiversionen
Klicke auf einen Zeitpunkt, um diese Version zu laden.
Version vom | Vorschaubild | Maße | Benutzer | Kommentar | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
aktuell | 22:32, 19. Mär. 2018 | 3.954 × 1.988 (13,61 MB) | Fabian RRRR (Diskussion | Beiträge) | == {{int:filedesc}} == {{Information |description={{en|1='''A red, metal-rich relic A red, metal-rich relic This idyllic scene, packed with glowing galaxies, has something truly remarkable at its core: an untouched relic of the ancient Universe. This relic can be seen in the large galaxy at the centre of the frame, a lenticular galaxy named NGC 1277. This galaxy is a member of the famous Perseus Cluster — one of the most massive objects in the known Universe, located some 220 million light-years from Earth. NGC 1277 has been dubbed a “relic of the early Universe” because all of its stars appear to have formed about 12 billion years ago. To put this in perspective, the Big Bang is thought to have happened 13.8 billion years ago. Teeming with billions of old, metal-rich stars, this galaxy is also home to many ancient globular clusters: spherical bundles of stars that orbit a galaxy like satellites. Uniquely, the globuar clusters of NGC 1277 are mostly red and metal-rich — very di... |
Du kannst diese Datei nicht überschreiben.
Dateiverwendung
Die folgenden 2 Seiten verwenden diese Datei:
- Commons:WikiProject Aviation/recent uploads/2018 March 19
- File:Potw1812a.tif (Dateiweiterleitung)
Globale Dateiverwendung
Die nachfolgenden anderen Wikis verwenden diese Datei:
Metadaten
Diese Datei enthält weitere Informationen, die in der Regel von der Digitalkamera oder dem verwendeten Scanner stammen. Durch nachträgliche Bearbeitung der Originaldatei können einige Details verändert worden sein.
Breite | 3.954 px |
---|---|
Höhe | 1.988 px |
Bits pro Farbkomponente |
|
Art der Kompression | LZW |
Pixelzusammensetzung | RGB |
Kameraausrichtung | Normal |
Anzahl Komponenten | 3 |
Anzahl Zeilen pro Streifen | 22 |
Horizontale Auflösung | 72 dpi |
Vertikale Auflösung | 72 dpi |
Datenausrichtung | Grobformat |
Software | Adobe Photoshop CC (Windows) |
Speicherzeitpunkt | 08:51, 14. Mär. 2018 |
Farbraum | Nicht kalibriert |