File:NGC2655 - HST - Potw1817a.tif

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Description
English: Stuck in the middle


This pretty, cloud-like object may not look much like a galaxy — it lacks the well-defined arms of a spiral galaxy, or the reddish bulge of an elliptical — but it is in fact something known as a lenticular galaxy. Lenticular galaxies sit somewhere between the spiral and elliptical types; they are disc-shaped, like spirals, but they no longer form large numbers of new stars and thus contain only ageing populations of stars, like ellipticals.

NGC 2655’s core is extremely luminous, resulting in its additional classification as a Seyfert galaxy: a type of active galaxy with strong and characteristic emission lines. This luminosity is thought to be produced as matter is dragged onto the accretion disc of a supermassive black hole sitting at the centre of NGC 2655. The structure of NGC 2655’s outer disc, on the other hand, appears calmer, but it is oddly-shaped. The complex dynamics of the gas in the galaxy suggest that it may have had a turbulent past, including mergers and interactions with other galaxies.

NGC 2655 is located about 80 million light-years from Earth in the constellation of Camelopardalis (The Giraffe). Camelopardalis contains many other interesting deep-sky objects, including the open cluster NGC 1502, the elegant Kemble’s Cascade asterism, and the starburst galaxy NGC 2146.

Credit:

ESA/Hubble & NASA, A. Fillipenko

Coordinates
Position (RA): 	8 55 40.08
Position (Dec):	78° 13' 23.43"
Field of view: 	2.58 x 1.97 arcminutes
Orientation:   	North is 129.9° right of vertical
Colours & filters Band	Wavelength	Telescope
Optical V	555 nm	Hubble Space Telescope WFC3
Optical V	555 nm	Hubble Space Telescope WFC3
Optical I	814 nm	Hubble Space Telescope WFC3
Optical I	814 nm	Hubble Space Telescope WFC3
.
Date 23 April 2018, 06:00 (release)
Source https://www.spacetelescope.org/images/potw1817a/
Author Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA

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Date/TimeThumbnailDimensionsUserComment
current05:27, 23 April 2018Thumbnail for version as of 05:27, 23 April 20183,906 × 2,983 (28.53 MB)Fabian RRRR (talk | contribs)== {{int:filedesc}} == {{Information |description={{en|1='''Stuck in the middle This pretty, cloud-like object may not look much like a galaxy — it lacks the well-defined arms of a spiral galaxy, or the reddish bulge of an elliptical — but it is in fact something known as a lenticular galaxy. Lenticular galaxies sit somewhere between the spiral and elliptical types; they are disc-shaped, like spirals, but they no longer form large numbers of new stars and thus contain only ageing population...

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