viernes, 23 de junio de 2017

NO TODO LO QUE VES... ES LO QUE VES || Hubble Uses Gravitational Lens to Capture Disk Galaxy | NASA

Hubble Uses Gravitational Lens to Capture Disk Galaxy | NASA



Hubble Uses 

Gravitational Lens 

to Capture Disk Galaxy

Wide view of galaxy cluster from Hubble space telescope
Acting as a “natural telescope” in space, the gravity of the extremely massive foreground galaxy cluster MACS J2129-0741 magnifies, brightens, and distorts the far-distant background galaxy MACS2129-1 in the upper-right corner of this image. (View an annotated image highlighting the gravitationally-lensed galaxy.)
By combining the power of this "natural lens" in space with the capability of NASA's Hubble Space Telescope, astronomers made a surprising discovery—the first example of a compact yet massive, fast-spinning, disk-shaped galaxy that stopped making stars only a few billion years after the big bang.  Finding such a galaxy early in the history of the universe challenges the current understanding of how massive galaxies form and evolve, say researchers. This is the first direct observational evidence that at least some of the earliest so-called "dead" galaxies — where star formation stopped — somehow evolve from a Milky Way-shaped disk into the giant elliptical galaxies we see today.
Image Credit: NASA, ESA, M. Postman (STScI), and the CLASH team
Last Updated: June 23, 2017
Editor: Sarah Loff

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