Spiral Galaxy Gallery

Discussion in 'Astronomy, Exobiology, & Cosmology' started by wet1, Feb 24, 2002.

  1. wet1 Wanderer Registered Senior Member

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    A Spiral Galaxy Gallery
    Credit: NASA, UIT

    A progression of beautiful spiral
    galaxies is illustrated above with
    three photographs from NASA's
    Ultraviolet Imaging Telescope (UIT).
    Flying above the Earth's obscuring
    layer of atmosphere on the Space
    Shuttle Columbia during the
    Astro-1 mission in 1990, UIT's
    cameras were able to image
    these distant spirals in the
    ultraviolet light produced by hot,
    young stars. These bright stars,
    newly condensed from gas and
    dust clouds, give away the location
    of the spiral arms they are born in.
    Because they are massive (many
    times the mass of the Sun), they
    are shortlived. Dying and fading
    before they move too far from their
    birth place they make excellent
    tracers of spiral structure. From left
    to right the galaxies are known as
    M33, M74, and M81 and have progressively
    more tightly wound spiral arms.
    Astronomers would classify these
    as Scd, Sc, and Sb type spirals using
    a galaxy classification scheme first
    worked out by Edwin Hubble.
     

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