Center of Dwarf Galaxy NGC 5253: Close-up View | Hubble
Hubble's High Resolution Channel (HRC) was designed to take a close and extremely detailed look into the center of celestial objects like the centers of galaxies, star clusters and star-forming regions. Its high resolution allows astronomers to distinguish many stars in a small area, permitting them to examine dense regions in depth. NGC 5253, a starburst galaxy filled with extraordinary star clusters and continually forming stars, is a perfect target for ACS with HRC. This image shows the galaxy’s nucleus in detail, where super star clusters lurk amongst the dark dust clouds.
HRC was only operational for about five years, between ACS’s installation and electronics failures in 2007 that took it offline. While ACS was partially repaired in Hubble’s last servicing mission in 2009, HRC could not be restored. Close-in, high-resolution images of galaxy cores like this one are, therefore, something of a rarity.
High-res Image Description: The bright center of a galaxy. It is filled with stars, most of which are bright blue points. There are some star clusters that appear as larger shining dots surrounded closely by more stars. Clouds of gas and dust can be seen behind the galaxy core, where they are lit up and appear pink in color, and in front of it, where they block out some of its light and appear dark in color.
Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA, W. D. Vacca
Release Date: June 24, 2024
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