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Hubble Space Image - Blue blobs

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Summary

Hubble Space Telescope's powerful vision has resolved strange objects nicknamed "blue blobs" and found them to be brilliant blue clusters of stars born in the swirls and eddies of a galactic smashup 200 million years ago. Such "blue blobs" — weighing tens of thousands of solar masses — have never been seen in detail before in such sparse locations, say researchers. The "blue blobs" are found along a wispy bridge of gas strung among three colliding galaxies, M81, M82, and NGC 3077, residing about 12 million light-years away from Earth. This is not the place astronomers expect to find star clusters, because the gas filaments were considered too thin to accumulate enough material to actually build these many stars. The star clusters in this diffuse structure might have formed from gas collisions and subsequent turbulence, which enhanced locally the density of the gas streams. Galaxy collisions were much more frequent in the early universe, so "blue blobs" should have been common. After the stars burned out or exploded, the heavier elements forged in their nuclear furnaces would have been ejected to enrich intergalactic space.

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Tags

hubble images hubble space telescope space impacts astronomy messier 81 messier 82 nasa
date_range

Date

1990 - 2020
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Source

Wikimedia Commons
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Link

http://commons.wikimedia.org/
copyright

Copyright info

Public Domain

label_outline Explore Messier 81, Messier 82

Topics

hubble images hubble space telescope space impacts astronomy messier 81 messier 82 nasa