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December 12, 2005

NGC 1275

NGC 1275

This image shows a deep hydrogen-alpha image of the brightest x-ray source in the sky--NGC 1275, taken by the WIYN 3.5-meter telescope at Kitt Peak National Observatory near Tucson, AZ.

The filaments emanating from this galaxy are produced through largely unknown mechanisms, but they likely are the result of an interaction between the black hole in the center of the galaxy and the intracluster medium surrounding it. (The glowing background objects in this image are galaxies in that same galaxy cluster.)

At a distance of about 230 million light-years, this is the nearest example to Earth of such vast structures, which are seen surrounding the most massive galaxies throughout the Universe. (Year of Image: 1999)

Credit: Credit: C. Conselic, Caltech; and WIYN/NOAO/AURA/NSF

Special Restrictions: Use of this image is restricted by the National Optical Astronomy Observatory (NOAO). For further information, see the NOAO/AURA Image Library's Conditions of Use Web page.


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