In celebration of the 18th anniversary of Hubble’s launch, NASA
released a series of 59 new images of colliding galaxies. Astronomy textbooks
typically present galaxies as staid, solitary, and majestic island worlds of
glittering stars.
But galaxies have a wild side. They have flirtatious close encounters that
sometimes end in grand mergers and overflowing “maternity wards” of new star
birth as the colliding galaxies morph into wondrous new shapes.
As this astonishing Hubble atlas of interacting galaxies
illustrates, galaxy collisions produce a remarkable variety of intricate
structures.
Interactions are slow stately affairs, despite the typically
high relative speeds of the interacting galaxies, taking hundreds of millions
of years to complete. The interactions usually follow the same progression, and
are driven by the tidal pull of gravity. Actual collisions between stars are
rare as so much of a galaxy is simply empty space, but as the gravitational
webs linking the stars in each galaxy begin to mesh, strong tidal effects
disrupt and distort the old patterns leading to new structures, and finally to
a new stable configuration.
Most of the 59 new Hubble images are part of a large
investigation of luminous and ultraluminous infrared galaxies called the GOALS
project (Great Observatories All-sky LIRG Survey). This survey combines
observations from Hubble, the NASA Spitzer Space Observatory, the NASA Chandra
X-Ray Observatory and NASA Galaxy Explorer. The Hubble observations are led by
Professor Aaron S. Evans from the University
of Virginia and the
National Radio Astronomy Observatory (USA). The images released today can be
seen here.
The Hubble Space Telescope (HST) will be repaired and
overhauled in August. Seven astronauts who will fly the Atlantis space shuttle
to rendezvous with Hubble will carry out the revamping mission. Their mission
has already been labeled STS-125. The goal of the mission is to repair the
orbiting telescope until a replacement will be manufactured in 2013.
The U.S.
astronauts selected for the next servicing mission to the Hubble Space
Telescope had begun already their training in February last year.
NASA had intended to mothball the Hubble before the new
telescope was in place, a decision that was met with protests among astronomers
who have been able to look into space 2.2 billion light years and more because
they don't have to peer through Earth's atmosphere.
Missions to the space station are easier because ISS crew is
on hand to help inspect the shuttle. The ISS also offers up to three months
refuge for visiting crew in case of an emergency. The Hubble, which orbits 580
kilometers above Earth, offers neither. That means the shuttle would have to
survive on its own for up to 25 days, with the second shuttle on stand-by at a
separate launch pad for a rescue mission.
A year ago, the Hubble telescope's most far-seeing camera
shut down due to a possible power failure and other problems, prompting NASA
engineers to put the entire telescope on temporary standby. The Advanced Camera
for Surveys (ACS) was installed in 2002 in a special shuttle mission to replace
the old space camera - in orbit since 1990 - and was hailed as the gateway to
some of humankind's most spectacular views of the universe.
The August STS-125 mission aims to install a cosmic origins
spectrograph and to replace a wide field camera in operation since 1993 with a
Wide Field Camera 3. This latest camera will be the first on the Hubble that
can cover everything from the ultraviolet to the infrared spectrum.
Theoretically, the James Webb observatory will replace
Hubble in 2013 the earliest. The Hubble Space Telescope (HST) was first
conceived in 1946 by astronomer Lyman Spitzer, constructed since 1979 and
launched in 1990.