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Spiral galaxies are a bit like snowflakes — they’re all beautiful, but no two look just alike.
Consider NGC 2217. It’s tens of millions of light-years away, in Canis Major, the big dog. It’s about the same size as our home galaxy, the Milky Way. But it looks much different — like sunlight reflecting off a silver hubcap. It consists of a big oval “bulge” of stars in the middle, with bars of stars extending off its ends. They connect with tightly wound spiral arms that enfold the center of the galaxy. More spiral arms form an almost perfect circle around those.
That layout may suggest that the galaxy was hit by a smaller galaxy. As they collided, NGC 2217 was stirred up. That might have transformed its layout from something similar to the Milky Way to what we see now.
The bars are feeding gas and dust into the center of the galaxy. Along the way, some of that material may give birth to new stars. And the stuff that doesn’t make new stars may be funneled into the supermassive black hole at the galaxy’s heart.
Whatever is happening, it’s molded NGC 2217 into its current form — a unique spiral galaxy — just like all the rest.
Canis Major is in the southeast at nightfall. Look for its brightest star, Sirius — the brightest star in the night sky. The body of the dog extends below and to the lower right of Sirius. NGC 2217 is near one of the dog’s back feet. But you need a telescope to pick it out.
Script by Damond Benningfield
Support McDonald Observatory
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Spiral galaxies are a bit like snowflakes — they’re all beautiful, but no two look just alike.
Consider NGC 2217. It’s tens of millions of light-years away, in Canis Major, the big dog. It’s about the same size as our home galaxy, the Milky Way. But it looks much different — like sunlight reflecting off a silver hubcap. It consists of a big oval “bulge” of stars in the middle, with bars of stars extending off its ends. They connect with tightly wound spiral arms that enfold the center of the galaxy. More spiral arms form an almost perfect circle around those.
That layout may suggest that the galaxy was hit by a smaller galaxy. As they collided, NGC 2217 was stirred up. That might have transformed its layout from something similar to the Milky Way to what we see now.
The bars are feeding gas and dust into the center of the galaxy. Along the way, some of that material may give birth to new stars. And the stuff that doesn’t make new stars may be funneled into the supermassive black hole at the galaxy’s heart.
Whatever is happening, it’s molded NGC 2217 into its current form — a unique spiral galaxy — just like all the rest.
Canis Major is in the southeast at nightfall. Look for its brightest star, Sirius — the brightest star in the night sky. The body of the dog extends below and to the lower right of Sirius. NGC 2217 is near one of the dog’s back feet. But you need a telescope to pick it out.
Script by Damond Benningfield
Support McDonald Observatory
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