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ESO Press Photos 33a-c/03
19 December 2003
For immediate release
Three Dusty Beauties
New Portraits of Spiral Galaxies NGC 613,
NGC 1792 and NGC 3627
Not so long ago, the real nature of the "spiral
nebulae", spiral-shaped objects observed in the sky through
telescopes, was still unknown. This long-standing issue was finally
settled in 1924 when the famous American astronomer Edwin Hubble
provided conclusive evidence that they are located outside our own
galaxy and are in fact "island universes" of their own.
Nowadays, we know that the Milky Way is just one of billions of
galaxies in the Universe. They come in vastly different shapes -
spiral, elliptical, irregular - and many of them are simply
beautiful, especially the spiral ones.
Astronomers Mark Neeser from the Universitäts-Sternwarte
München (Germany) and Peter Barthel from the Kapteyn
Institute in Groningen (The Netherlands) were clearly not
insensitive to this when they obtained images of three beautiful
spiral galaxies with ESO's Very Large Telescope
(VLT). They did this in twilight during the early morning when they
had to stop their normal observing programme, searching for very
distant and faint quasars.
The resulting colour images (ESO PR Photos 33a-c/03) were
produced by combining several CCD images in three different
wavebands from the FORS multi-mode
instruments.
The three galaxies are known as NGC 613, NGC 1792 and
NGC 3627. They are characterized by strong far-infrared, as
well as radio emission, indicative of substantial ongoing
star-formation activity. Indeed, these images all display prominent
dust as well as features related to young stars, clear signs of
intensive star-formation.
NGC 613
NGC 613 is a beautiful barred spiral galaxy in the
southern constellation Sculptor. This galaxy is inclined by 32
degrees and, contrary to most barred spirals, has many arms that
give it a tentacular appearance.
Prominent dust lanes are visible along the large-scale bar.
Extensive star-formation occurs in this area, at the ends of the
bar, and also in the nuclear regions of the galaxy. The gas at the
centre, as well as the radio properties are indicative of the
presence of a massive black hole in the centre of NGC 613.
NGC 1792
NGC 1792 is located in the southern constellation Columba
(The Dove) - almost on the border with the constellation Caelum (The
Graving Tool) - and is a so-called starburst spiral galaxy. Its
optical appearance is quite chaotic, due to the patchy distribution
of dust throughout the disc of this galaxy. It is very rich in
neutral hydrogen gas - fuel for the formation of new stars - and is
indeed rapidly forming such stars. The galaxy is characterized by
unusually luminous far-infrared radiation; this is due to dust
heated by young stars.
M 66 (NGC 3627)
The third galaxy is NGC 3627, also known as Messier 66,
i.e. it is the 66th object in the famous catalogue of nebulae by
French astronomer Charles Messier (1730 - 1817). It is
located in the constellation Leo (The Lion).
NGC 3627 is a beautiful spiral with a well-developed central
bulge. It also displays large-scale dust lanes. Many regions of warm
hydrogen gas are seen throughout the disc of this galaxy. The latter
regions are being ionised by radiation from clusters of newborn
stars. Very active star-formation is most likely also occurring in
the nuclear regions of NGC 3627.
The galaxy forms, together with its neighbours M 65 and NGC 3628,
the so-called "Leo Triplet"; they are located at a distance
of about 35 million light-years. M 66 is the largest of the three.
Its spiral arms appear distorted and displaced above the main plane
of the galaxy. The asymmetric appearance is most likely due to
gravitational interaction with its neighbours.
Technical Information: The images were taken by
Mark Neeser (Universitäts-Sternwarte München,
Germany) and Peter Barthel (Kapteyn
Astronomical Institute, Netherlands) during twilight on the nights
of 16-18 December 2001 with the FORS multi-mode instruments attached
to the VLT-MELIPAL (FORS1) or VLT-YEPUN (FORS2). Each galaxy was
observed in three different wavebands for up to 300 seconds per
waveband, and the image obtained in each waveband was associated to
a colour: B (blue), V (green) and R (red).
Neeser and Barthel also
performed the first stage of the image processing; further
processing and colour-encoding was made by Hans-Herman
Heyer and Henri Boffin
(ESO).
Contacts
Richard West European Southern Observatory Garching
bei München, Germany Phone: +49 89 3200 6276 email:rwest@eso.org |