Dark galaxies spotted for the first time
This deep image shows the region of the sky around the quasar HE0109-3518. The quasar is near the centre of the image. The energetic radiation of the quasar makes dark galaxies glow, helping astronomers to understand the obscure early stages of galaxy formation. Dark galaxies are essentially devoid of stars, therefore they don’t emit any light that telescopes can catch. This makes them virtually impossible to observe unless they are illuminated by an external light source like a background quasar.
This image combines observations from the Very Large Telescope, tuned to detect the fluorescent emissions produced by the quasar illuminating the dark galaxies, with colour data from the Digitized Sky Survey 2.
Telif:ESO, Digitized Sky Survey 2 and S. Cantalupo (UCSC)
Görüntü Hakkında
Kimlik: | eso1228a |
Tür: | Gözlem |
Yayın tarihi: | 11 Temmuz 2012 12:00 |
Bağlantılı bültenler: | eso1228 |
Boyut: | 1600 x 1700 px |
Nesne Hakkında
Adı: | HE 0109-3518 |
Tür: | Early Universe : Galaxy Early Universe : Galaxy : Activity : AGN : Quasar |
Uzaklık: | z=2.4 (kırmızıya kayma) |
Constellation: | Sculptor |
Kategori: | Quasars and Black Holes |
Duvarkağıtları
Koordinatlar
Position (RA): | 1 11 43.68 |
Position (Dec): | -35° 3' 0.94" |
Field of view: | 6.70 x 7.12 arcminutes |
Yönelim: | Kuzey yönü 0.1° sol derece kadar dik konumdan sapma göstermektedir |
Renkler & Filtreler
Bant | Dalgaboyu | Teleskop |
---|---|---|
Optik B | Digitized Sky Survey 2 N/A | |
Optik R | Digitized Sky Survey 2 N/A | |
Kırmızı ötesi I | Digitized Sky Survey 2 N/A | |
Optik B | 414 nm | Very Large Telescope FORS2 |