Misplaced Pages

Antennae Galaxies: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 21:47, 24 March 2006 editHurricane Devon (talk | contribs)4,670 editsm Antennae's past: typo← Previous edit Revision as of 13:48, 2 April 2006 edit undoHurricane Devon (talk | contribs)4,670 edits External links: +CatNext edit →
Line 51: Line 51:
] ]
] ]
]


] ]

Revision as of 13:48, 2 April 2006

Galaxies
Morphology
Structure
Active nuclei
Energetic galaxies
Low activity
Interaction
Lists
See also

The Antennae Galaxies (also known as NGC 4038 and NGC 4039) are a pair of galaxies about 68 million ly away in the constellation Corvus. They were both discovered by Friedrich Wilhelm Herschel in 1785.

General information

The Antennae are undergoing a galactic collision. Located in the NGC 4038 group with five others. The galaxies are known as the 'Antennae' because the two long tails of stars, gas, and dust thrown out of the galaxies as a result of the collision resemble the antennae of an insect. The nuclei of the two galaxies are joining to become one supergalaxy. Most galaxies probably undergo at least one significant collision in their lifetimes. This is likely the future of our Milky Way when it collides with Andromeda. In 2004, a supernova, SN 2004gt, was observed in NGC 4038.

Timeline

Antennae's past

About 1.2 billion years ago, the Antennae were two separate galaxies. NGC 4038 was a spiral galaxy and NGC 4039 was a barred spiral galaxy, even though they are still spiral and barred spiral. It may look like NGC 4038 is larger then NGC 4039, but before they collieded, NGC 4039 was larger than NGC 4038. 900 million years ago, the Antennae started to get close to each other, looking similar to NGC 2207 and IC 2163. 600 million years ago, the Antennae had already gone through each other, looking like the Mice Galaxies. 300 million years ago, the Antennae's stars began to be flung out of both galaxies. Today the two streamers of ejected stars extend far beyond the original galaxies, making the antennae shape.

Antennae's future

Within 400 million years, the Antennae's nuclei will colide and become a single core with stars, gas, and dust around it. With in a billion years the galaxy shall look like a normal galaxy, the 'Antenna Galaxy'. It's not 100% sure whether it'll be a spiral or a barred spiral galaxy. The brand new galaxy will go on for billions of years, maybe with more collisions in it's future.

File:Antennen-galaxies2.jpg
The full look at the Antennae,
NGC 4038 (top) and NGC 4039 (bottom)

Other resources

See also


External links

Categories: