Hubble Telescope Snaps Photo of Massive (and Weird) Hybrid Galaxy – Space.com

Hubble collected this stunning image of galaxy UGC 12591, located in the Pisces-Perseus Supercluster. This hybrid galaxy is a combination of a lenticular and a spiral galaxy and is one of the largest known structures in the Universe.

The Hubble Space Telescope has captured an amazing view of a strange hybrid galaxy 400 million light-years away.

The galaxy, called UGC 12591, is odd because it's a cross betweena typical lenticular and spiral galaxy. It is located in the westernmost reaches of the Pisces-Perseus Supercluster - a vast chain of galaxy clusters that extends across hundreds of millions of light-years. The galaxy is also a fast spinner, rotating at a mind-boggling 1.1 million mph (1.8 million km/h), according to a NASA description. [8 Galaxies With Really Weird Names]

"The galaxy itself is also extraordinary: it is incredibly massive," NASA officials wrote in an image description. The galaxy and its halo together contain several hundred billion times the mass of the sun; four timesmass of the Milky Way."

Using the Hubble Space Telescope astronomers are beginning to understand the mass of UGC 12951, NASA officials added. Scientists are using data from Hubble to establish whether the monster galaxy formed and stretched over time, or if it was formed from two large galaxies colliding at some point in the distant past, they added.

The Pisces-Perseus Supercluster of galaxy clusters, which UGC 12951 calls home, is one of the largest known structures in the universe, NASA officials added.

You can follow us @Spacedotcom and on Facebook & Google+. Original story on Space.com.

View original post here:

Hubble Telescope Snaps Photo of Massive (and Weird) Hybrid Galaxy - Space.com

Related Posts

Comments are closed.