Credit & Copyright: Data -
Hubble Legacy Archive,
Subaru Telescope (NAOJ),
Don Goldman
Processing - Robert Gendler, Roberto Colombari, Don Goldman
Explanation:
A bright spiral galaxy of the northern sky,
Messier 63
is about 25 million light-years distant in the
loyal constellation
Canes
Venatici.
Also cataloged as NGC 5055, the majestic
island universe
is nearly 100,000 light-years across.
That's about the size
of our own Milky Way Galaxy.
Known by the popular moniker, The Sunflower Galaxy,
M63 sports a bright yellowish core in this sharp composite
image
from space- and ground-based telescopes.
Its sweeping blue spiral arms are streaked with cosmic dust lanes and
dotted with pink star forming regions.
A dominant member of a known
galaxy
group, M63 has faint, extended features that are likely star streams from
tidally
disrupted satellite galaxies.
M63 shines across
the electromagnetic spectrum and is thought to have
undergone
bursts of intense
star
formation.
Processing - Robert Gendler, Roberto Colombari, Don Goldman
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& Michigan Tech. U.
Based on Astronomy Picture
Of the Day
Publications with keywords: spiral galaxy - M 63
Publications with words: spiral galaxy - M 63
See also: