These Hubble images show the dim, star-starved dwarf galaxy Leo - TopicsExpress



          

These Hubble images show the dim, star-starved dwarf galaxy Leo IV. The image at left shows part of the galaxy, outlined by the white rectangular box. The box measures 83 light-years wide by 163 light-years long. The few stars in Leo IV are lost amid neighboring stars and distant galaxies. A close-up view of the background galaxies within the box is shown in the middle image. The image at right shows only the stars in Leo IV. The galaxy, which contains several thousand stars, is composed of sun-like stars, fainter, red dwarf stars, and some red giant stars brighter than the sun. Credit: NASA, ESA, and T. Brown (STScI) Astronomers have puzzled over why some puny, extremely faint dwarf galaxies spotted in our Milky Way galaxys back yard contain so few stars. These ghost-like galaxies are thought to be some of the tiniest, oldest, and most pristine galaxies in the universe. They have been discovered over the past decade by astronomers using automated computer techniques to search through the images of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. But astronomers needed NASAs Hubble Space Telescope to help solve the mystery of these star-starved galaxies.
Posted on: Sun, 09 Nov 2014 02:52:14 +0000

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