sábado, 1 de julio de 2017

PASSWORD || Hubble Eyes a Powerful Galaxy With a Password Name | NASA

Hubble Eyes a Powerful Galaxy With a Password Name | NASA





Hubble Eyes a Powerful 

Galaxy With a Password 

Name

two galaxies, on big and blueish, the other small and gold.
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Credits: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center/Jenny Hottle
Not all galaxies have the luxury of possessing a simple moniker or quirky nickname.   This impressive galaxy imaged by the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope is one of the unlucky ones, and goes by a name that looks more like a password for a computer:  2XMM J143450.5+033843.
Such a name may seem like a random jumble of numbers and letters, but like all galactic epithets it has a distinct meaning. This galaxy, for example, was detected and observed as part of the second X-ray sky survey performed by ESA’s XMM-Newton Observatory. Its celestial coordinates form the rest of the bulky name, following the “J”: a right ascension value of 14h (hours) 34m (minutes) 50.5s (seconds). This can be likened to terrestrial longitude. It also has a declination of +03d (degrees) 38m (minutes) 43s (seconds). Declination can be likened to terrestrial latitude. The other fuzzy object in the frame was named in the same way — it is a bright galaxy named 2XMM J143448.3+033749.
2XMM J143450.5+033843 lies nearly 400 million light-years away from Earth. It is a Seyfert galaxy that is dominated by something known as an Active Galactic Nucleus — its core is thought to contain a supermassive black hole that is emitting huge amounts of radiation, pouring energetic X-rays out into the Universe.
Photo credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA
Text Credit: European Space Agency
Last Updated: June 30, 2017
Editor: Karl Hille

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