What it is: Spiral galaxy NGC 6744
Where it is: 30 million light-years away in the constellation Pavo
When it was shared: Aug. 21, 2024
Why it’s so special: Because we’re embedded within the Milky Way and there’s no way of sending spacecraft much further than the solar system’s edge, astronomers have no way of taking an image of our home galaxy. So, to better understand how the Milky Way looks from the outside, and to learn more about how it formed and is evolving, scientists have to study other spiral galaxies. One of the best examples is NGC 6744, a spiral galaxy that’s very similar to our own.
With spiral arms spanning 175,000 light-years across, NGC 6744 is larger than the Milky Way, which spans about 100,000 light-years, according to NASA. About 60% of all galaxies are considered spirals, so most of the stars in the universe are located within them — and NGC 6744 is considered an archetype of this type of galaxy.
This spectacular new image of NGC 6744 features a bright nucleus and the lanes of dust that fuel star formation. To the left of NGC 6744 is a faint arm not seen in most images of the galaxy, while to the lower right, at the end of a spiral arm, is a faint companion galaxy known as NGC 6744A.
Related: James Webb telescope spots 6 enormous ‘rogue planets’ tumbling through space without a star
Source www.livescience.com
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