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Dimension [pixels] | Dimension in 300dpi [mm] | File size [MB] | Online Purchase | |
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Large | 2037 × 2036 px | 172 × 172 mm | 391 KB | |
Medium | 1024 × 1023 px | 87 × 87 mm | 981 KB |
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IMAGE number
PIX4612179
Image title
Centaurus A elliptical galaxy (NGC 5128) in the Centaurus - Galaxy Centaurus A (NGC 5128) - The galaxy NGC 5128 is located about 13 million years away from Earth. This Giant Galaxy is a powerful radio source known as Centaurus A. It is an active galaxy whose energy comes from a supermassive black hole. This image obtained by the Kueyen telescope of the VLT in Chile on 1 February 2000 shows the star flames that occur in the dark band of the galaxy. Centaurus A is one of the foremost examples of a radio - loud active galactic nucleus (AGN). On images obtained at optical wavelengths, thick dust layers almost completely obscure the galaxy's centre. Until 1949, NGC 5128 was thought to be a strange object in the Milky Way, but it was then identified as a powerful radio galaxy and designated Centaurus A. The distance is about 10 - 13 million light - years (3 - 4 Mpc) and the apparent visual magnitude is about 8, or 5 times too faint to be seen with the unaided eye. There is strong evidence that Centaurus A is a merger of an elliptical with a spiral galaxy, since elliptical galaxies would not have had enough dust and gas to form the young, blue stars seen along the edges of the dust lane. The core of Centaurus A is the smallest known extragalactic radio source, only 10 light - days across. A jet of high energy particles from this centre is observed in radio and X - ray images. The core probably contains a supermassive black hole with a mass of about 100 million solar masses. Image taken with Kueyen telescope (VLT) in Chile
Image description
Photo credit
Photo © ESO/Novapix / Bridgeman Images
Dimension [pixels] | Dimension in 300dpi [mm] | File size [MB] | Online Purchase | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Large | 2037 × 2036 px | 172 × 172 mm | 391 KB | |
Medium | 1024 × 1023 px | 87 × 87 mm | 981 KB |
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