FairReason.com, Liberty, Empathy Knowledge & Reason

  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
Home Astronomy/Cosmology Unusual Starburst Galaxy NGC 1313

Unusual Starburst Galaxy NGC 1313

E-mail Print PDF
Submitted By
Russ Williams

Explanation: Why is this galaxy so discombobulated? Usually, galaxies this topsy-turvy result from a recent collision with a neighboring galaxy. Spiral galaxy NGC 1313, however, appears to be alone. Brightly lit with new and blue massive stars, star formation appears so rampant in NGC 1313 that it has been labeled a starburst galaxy. Strange features of NGC 1313 include that its spiral arms are lopsided and its rotational axis is not at the center of the nuclear bar. Pictured above, NGC 1313 spans about 50,000 light years and lies only about 15 million light years away toward the constellation of the Reticle (Reticulum). Continued numerical modeling of galaxies like NGC 1313 might shed some light on its unusual nature.



Share This!
 

Please register. We are interested in your comments.

Login

Please login to see
your Profile Complete Bar

Quotes

Submitted By
Russ Williams
Patriotism is the virtue of the vicious.

Oscar Wilde

Submit Articles

We encourage the submission of your original articles, news and opinions. Once you have submitted an article and it is published on FairReason.com, you will be granted "Publisher" status. This means that your articles will then be automatically published without initial review.

Russ Williams

FairReason.com