Two Views of a Lopsided Galaxy

[/caption]

From an ESO press release:

The Meathook Galaxy, or NGC 2442, has a dramatically lopsided shape. One spiral arm is tightly folded in on itself and host to a recent supernova, while the other, dotted with recent star formation, extends far out from the nucleus. The MPG/ESO 2.2-metre telescope and the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope have captured two contrasting views of this asymmetric spiral galaxy.

The Meathook Galaxy, or NGC 2442, in the southern constellation of Volans (The Flying Fish), is easily recognised for its asymmetric spiral arms. The galaxy’s lopsided appearance is thought to be due to gravitational interactions with another galaxy at some point in its history — though astronomers have not so far been able to positively identify the culprit.

This broad view, taken by the Wide Field Imager on the MPG/ESO 2.2-metre telescope at La Silla, Chile, very clearly shows the double hook shape that gives the galaxy its nickname. This image also captures several other galaxies close to NGC 2442 as well as many more remote galaxies that form a rich backdrop. Although the Wide Field Imager, on the ground, cannot approach the sharpness of images from Hubble in space, it can cover a much bigger section of sky in a single exposure. The two tools often provide complementary information to astronomers.

This close-up Hubble view of the Meathook Galaxy (NGC 2442) focuses on the more compact of its two asymmetric spiral arms as well as the central regions. The spiral arm was the location of a supernova that exploded in 1999. These observations were made in 2006 in order to study the aftermath of this supernova. Ground-based data from MPG/ESO 2.2-metre telescope were used to fill out parts of the edges of this image. Credit: NASA/ESA and ESO

A close-up image from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope (eso1115b) focuses on the galaxy’s nucleus and the more compact of its two spiral arms. In 1999, a massive star at the end of its life exploded in this arm in a supernova. By comparing older ground-based observations, previous Hubble images made in 2001, and these shots taken in late 2006, astronomers have been able to study in detail what happened to the star in its dying moments. By the time of this image the supernova itself had faded and is not visible.

ESO’s observations also highlight the other end of the life cycle of stars from Hubble. Dotted across much of the galaxy, and particularly in the longer of the two spiral arms, are patches of pink and red. This colour comes from hydrogen gas in star-forming regions: as the powerful radiation of new-born stars excites the gas in the clouds they formed from, it glows a bright shade of red.

The interaction with another galaxy that gave the Meathook Galaxy its unusual asymmetric shape is also likely to have been the trigger of this recent episode of star formation. The same tidal forces that deformed the galaxy disrupted clouds of gas and triggered their gravitational collapse.

One Reply to “Two Views of a Lopsided Galaxy”

  1. NGC 2442 is the largest member of a compact group of galaxies (LGG 147) with about a dozen lower mass members. While several of these smaller galaxies have been proposed as possible actors, none of them presents unambiguous signs of having ‘done the deed’. No galaxies adjoining LGG 147 seem to fit the bill either.

    However, radio observations have revealed a large intergalactic cloud of neutral hydrogen (HI) near NGC 2442. This HI cloud is roughly a third the mass of HI in NGC 2442, equivalent to a billion solar masses.

    A second scenario has been proposed by Ryder et al that invokes ram-pressure stripping as a possible mechanism responsible for the nearby HI cloud, NGC 2442’s distorted appearance and starburst activity in the arms: http://iopscience.iop.org/0004-637X/555/1/232/pdf/53313.web.pdf

    Section 3 of the paper discusses evidence for tidal encounter vs ram-pressure stripping models. A deep high contrast view of the region shows 7 smaller companions to NGC 2442 (Fig. 2).

    (Although the linked paper was published back in 2001, a 2010 paper discussing Spitzer imaging of the galaxy notes that the issue of what occurred here has still not been resolved)

Comments are closed.