Galaxy Cluster Abell 2666

2017-03-10

Astronomy Photo of the Day
copyright: Bernhard Hubl

The galaxies of Abell 2666 lie far beyond the Milky Way, some 340 million light-years distant toward the high flying constellation Pegasus. Framed in this sharp telescopic image, the pretty cluster galaxies are gathered behind scattered, spiky, Milky Way stars. At cluster center is giant elliptical galaxy NGC 7768, the central dominant galaxy of the cluster. As the cluster forms, such massive galaxies are thought to grow by mergers of galaxies that fall through the center of the cluster's gravitational well. Typical of dominant cluster galaxies, NGC 7768 likely harbors a supermassive black hole. At the estimated distance of Abell 2666, this cosmic frame would span about 5 million light-years.



Don't like this one? Enter a date and check out a different photo.

     

How about a random one?

Random

Some of my favorites:

Sombrero Galaxy M100 Galaxy Rosette Nebula Saturn NGC 2841 Aurora Horsehead Nebula Pillars of Creation Comet Europa Jupiter Earthrise Galaxy Merger