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(呵呵---不知道这儿有没有,我貌似没见到过~~谁叫夜猫子发那么多好图看得我眼花缭乱呢?)
Dwarf irregular galaxy Leo A
In 2004, an international team of astronomers imaged the dwarf irregular galaxy Leo A with the Subaru Telescope in Hawaii. The galaxy, which is a member of the Local Group of galaxies that includes the Milky Way, lies about 2.6 million light-years away. The astronomers discovered an extended halo of stars with a sharp cutoff, effectively doubling Leo A's size to about 6,000 light-years across. The discovery challenges current scenarios of galaxy formation: Instead of being the preservers of pristine building blocks that combined to form larger galaxies, dwarf irregular galaxies have their own construction history. Subaru Telescope, NAOJ
Interstellar bubble N44F
The Hubble Space Telescope captured this image of a 35-light-year-wide bubble blown by radiation from a hot young star. Known as N44F, the bubble lies 160,000 light years away in a neighboring galaxy known as the Large Magellanic Cloud. A torrent of fast-moving particles — called a stellar wind — streams from an exceptionally hot star once buried inside a cold dense cloud. The central star of N44F ejects 100 million times more mass per second — and at speeds more than four times faster — than does our Sun, which is also losing mass through its own solar wind. The stream of particles sweeps up the gas and dust around the star, pushing it together and inflating it into this enormous interstellar bubble. This image was taken with Hubble's Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 in March 2002. NASA, ESA, Y. Naze (University of Liege, Belgium) and Y.
The Red Rectangle
Discovered in the early 1970s as a strong source of infrared radiation, the Red Rectangle lies about 2,300 light-years from Earth in the constellation Monoceros. Its central stars, which form a binary pair, are embedded in a disk of dust, but their interaction funnels dust and gas up and away, forming the X-shaped structure. NASA, ESA, H. Van Winckel and M. Cohen |
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