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Judi Lynn

(160,542 posts)
Wed Jul 8, 2020, 02:35 AM Jul 2020

Astronomy's Most Perfect Ring Galaxy, Hoag's Object, Is Still A Mystery After 70 Years

Jul 8, 2020,02:00am EDT

Starts With A Bang
Ethan Siegel Senior



Hoag's object is a bizarre and unusual ring galaxy, with an old population of stars in the central... [+] NASA AND THE HUBBLE HERITAGE TEAM (STSCI/AURA); ACKNOWLEDGMENT: RAY A. LUCAS (STSCI/AURA)

Every once in a while, we find an object in the Universe that completely mystifies us. For generations, astronomers have been observing distant galaxies present all throughout the Universe, cataloguing them and noting their various characteristics. Overwhelmingly, galaxies fell into three different categories:

  • spiral galaxies, where stars are concentrated in vast, sweeping arms,
  • elliptical galaxies, where stars swarm around a central region,
  • and irregular galaxies, which are neither spiral nor elliptical, and which often correspond to two or more galaxies in the process of interacting.

    Spirals and ellipticals are ubiquitous, with spirals more common among isolated or sparsely populated regions of space, while ellipticals often dominate the centers of large galaxy clusters. But in 1950, astronomer Arther Hoag discovered a galaxy unlike any other: Hoag's object, dominated by a vast, ring-like halo. 70 years later, we're still struggling to piece together this galactic mystery.



    This image is a composite of the Ring Nebula (Messier 57). This combines new Hubble Wide Field... [+] HUBBLE DATA: NASA, ESA, C. ROBERT O’DELL (VANDERBILT UNIVERSITY); LBT DATA: DAVID THOMPSON

    More:
    https://www.forbes.com/sites/startswithabang/2020/07/08/astronomys-most-perfect-ring-galaxy-hoags-object-is-still-a-mystery-after-70-years/#223a13311c35
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    Astronomy's Most Perfect Ring Galaxy, Hoag's Object, Is Still A Mystery After 70 Years (Original Post) Judi Lynn Jul 2020 OP
    Gorgeous! LuvNewcastle Jul 2020 #1
    Larry Niven just didn't think large enough lapfog_1 Jul 2020 #2
    The Eye of Sauron? n/m orwell Jul 2020 #3

    LuvNewcastle

    (16,846 posts)
    1. Gorgeous!
    Wed Jul 8, 2020, 02:48 AM
    Jul 2020

    Some of these places are so stunning that they nearly take your breath away when looking at them. They certainly can make a human feel insignificant.

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