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A Giant Galaxy

Centaurus A is our nearest giant galaxy, at a distance of about 13 million light-years in the southern constellation of Centaurus, and as such, it is one of the most extensively studied objects in the southern sky. It is an elliptical galaxy, currently merging with a companion spiral galaxy, resulting in areas of intense star formation and making it one of the most spectacular objects in the sky. Centaurus A hosts a very active and highly luminous central region, caused by the presence of a supermassive black hole with a mass of about 100 million solar masses (see eso0109), and is the source of strong radio and X-ray emission. Thick dust layers almost completely obscure the galaxy's centre. This image is based on data acquired with the 1.5-metre Danish telescope at ESO’s La Silla Observatory in Chile, through three filters (B, V, R).

Credit:

ESO/IDA/Danish 1.5 m/R. Gendler, J.-E. Ovaldsen & S. Guisard (www.eso.org/~sguisard) (ESO)

About the Image

Id:cena
Type:Observation
Release date:3 December 2009, 23:20
Size:1460 x 1130 px

About the Object

Distance:13 million light years

Coordinates

View in WorldWide Telescope
Position (RA):201.36542 °
Position (Dec):-43.019319 °

Colours & filters

BandTelescope
Optical
B
Danish 1.54-metre telescope
Optical
V
Danish 1.54-metre telescope
Optical
R
Danish 1.54-metre telescope

Images

Large JPEG
490.9 KB
Screensize JPEG
172.7 KB

Wallpapers

1024x768
229.5 KB
1280x1024
398.0 KB
1600x1200
577.2 KB
2048x1536
878.9 KB

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