Multi-million-degree gas fills the space in between the individual galaxies. The mass of the hot gas is about six times greater than that of all the galaxies combined.
This superheated gas is invisible to optical telescopes, but shines brightly in X-rays, so an X-ray telescope like NASAs Chandra X-ray Observatory is required to study it.
By combining X-rays with other types of light, such as radio waves, a more complete picture of these important cosmic objects can be obtained.
A new composite image of the galaxy cluster Abell 1033, including X-rays from Chandra (purple) and radio emission from the Low-Frequency Array (LOFAR) network in the Netherlands (blue), does just that.
Optical emission from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey is also shown. The galaxy cluster is located about 1.6 billion light years from Earth. Using X-ray and radio data, scientists have determined that Abell 1033 is actually two galaxy clusters in the process of colliding.
This extraordinarily energetic event, happening from the top to the bottom in the image, has produced turbulence and shock waves, similar to sonic booms produced by a plane moving faster than the speed of sound.
In addition to the astrophysical value, the new Abell 1033 image also provides an excellent example of something that happens in another scientific field.
Pareidolia is the psychological phenomenon where familiar shapes and patterns are seen in otherwise random data.
In Abell 1033, the structures in the data create an uncanny resemblance at least to some people to many of the depictions of the fictional Starship Enterprise from Star Trek.
Because of the abstract quality of data taken of space objects, pareidolia can happen quite frequently with astronomical images.
Credit: CXC/NASA
Very cool 3-min YouTube video...
Chandra X-ray Observatory: A Tour of Abell 1033:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mvnZEUG_tJ8
I’m glad I don’t have to pay the insurance premiums for that!..............
“located about 1.6 billion light-years from Earth.”
Considering the distance, is this not “Yesterdays News?”....LOL
I just love to look at composite, color enhanced, shall we say photoshopped supposed pictures of celestial bodies.
The real beauties are the black and white pictures taken directly from the focus of a large telescope.
“Starship Enterprise”
Chuckles. Exactly my interpretation.