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    ESA > Our Activities > Space Science

    Antennae galaxies’ fertile marriage

    Hubble's view of the Antennae galaxies
    17 October 2006

    A new Hubble image of the Antennae galaxies is the sharpest yet of this merging pair of galaxies. As the two galaxies smash together, thousand of millions of stars are born, mostly in groups and clusters of stars.

    The Universe is an all-action arena for some of the largest, most slowly evolving and surprising processes known to mankind. A new picture taken by the Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS), onboard the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, shows the best ever view of the Antennae galaxies - seemingly a violent clash between a pair of once isolated galaxies, but in reality a fertile marriage.

    Wide ground view of the Antennae galaxies

    As the two galaxies interact, thousand of millions of stars are born, mostly in groups and clusters of stars.

    The brightest and most compact of these are called super star clusters.


    Panning on the Antennae galaxies
    Panning on the Antennae galaxies

    The two spiral galaxies started to fuse together about 500 million years ago making the Antenna galaxies the nearest and youngest example of a pair of colliding galaxies. Nearly half of the faint objects in the Antennae are young clusters containing tens of thousands of stars.

    The orange blobs to the left and right of image centre are the two cores of the original galaxies and consist mainly of old stars criss-crossed by filaments of dark brown dust. The two galaxies are dotted with brilliant blue star-forming regions surrounded by pink hydrogen gas.

    Antennae in southern constellation of Corvus

    The image allows astronomers to better distinguish between the stars and super star clusters created in the collision of two spiral galaxies. The observations show that only about 10% of the newly formed super star clusters in the Antennae will live to see their ten millionth birthday.

    The vast majority of the super star clusters formed during this interaction will disperse, with the individual stars becoming part of the smooth background of the galaxy.

    It is however believed that about a hundred of the most massive clusters will survive to form regular globular clusters, similar to the globular clusters found in our own Milky Way galaxy.

    Zooming on the Antennae galaxies
    Zooming on the Antennae galaxies

    The Antennae galaxies take their name from the long antenna-like 'arms' extending far out from the nuclei of the two galaxies, best seen by ground-based telescopes.

    These 'tidal tails' were formed during the initial encounter of the galaxies some 500 million years ago. They give us a preview of what may happen when our Milky Way galaxy likely collides with the neighbouring Andromeda Galaxy about 6 billion years from now.

    Notes for editors

    The Hubble Space Telescope is a project of international cooperation between ESA and NASA.

    For more information, please contact

    Brad Whitmore, Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore, USA
    Email: whitmore @ stsci.edu

    Lars Lindberg Christensen, Hubble/ESA, Garching, Germany
    Email: lars @ eso.org

    Ray Villard, Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore, USA
    Email: villard @ stsci.edu

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