Gravity bends and tugs at dueling galaxies in NASA's vivid new Hubble pic

Share This Post

The triplet of galaxies known as

In the Atlas of Peculiar Galaxies (a collection of wild, wondrous galaxies) is a stretched, distorted cosmic object, known as “Arp 195.” The trusty Hubble Space Telescope recently captured a vivid shot of this weird place in the universe, which is actually three galaxies in a “gravitational tug-of-war,” explained NASA.

“Galactic siblings fight, too,” the space agency tweeted.

The image shows an elongated galaxy sandwiched, and stretched, between two galaxies. A long tail is visible in the galaxy on the right in this image: Called a “tidal tail,” this can occur when stars and gases are “stripped” from the outside arms of galaxies during a merger, according to Cosmos.

The Hubble Space Telescope — the size of a large school bus — is over 30 years old. The solar-powered telescope takes detailed images of far-off cosmic objects, like Arp 195, yet the legendary instrument is wearing down with age, most recently exemplified by a computer problem that sent Hubble offline for weeks. Still, NASA expects “Hubble will last for many more years and will continue making groundbreaking observations, working in tandem with other space observatories including the James Webb Space Telescope to further our knowledge of the cosmos.”

The James Webb Space Telescope — the next generation of space telescope — is currently set to launch on Halloween 2021.

Subscribe The Newsletter

Get updates and learn from the best

More To Explore

Do You Want To Stay Connected?

drop a line and keep in touch