The hurly-burly interactions in the compact group of galaxies known as
Stephan’s Quintet are shown in the upper left where a Chandra X-ray
Observatory image (blue) is superimposed on a Digitized Sky Survey
optical image (yellow). Shock-heated gas, visible only with an X-ray
telescope, appears as a bright blue cloud oriented vertically in the
middle of the image and has a temperature of about 6 million degrees
Celsius. The heating is produced by the rapid motion of a spiral galaxy
intruder located immediately to the right of the shock wave in the
center of the image (galaxy labeled B in the wide field optical image on
the lower right).
Stephan’s Quintet is an excellent example of the tumultuous dynamics of
a compact group. The motion of the galaxies through the hot gas, and the
gravitational pull of nearby galaxies are stripping cool gas from the
galaxies, thereby depriving them of the raw material from which to form
new stars. In a few billion years the spiral galaxies in Stephan’s
Quintet will likely be transformed into elliptical galaxies.
During the past few billion years additional gas may have been stripped
from the galaxies in the group and heated by collisions such as the one
seen in these images. An intruder that may have passed through the
center of the group at least twice is the faint galaxy C seen in the
wide field optical image. The fainter blue cloud in the X-ray/optical
image may be a relic of past collisions.
The four galaxies A, B, D and E strung out diagonally across the wide
field optical image are at a distance of about 280 million light years
from Earth. The large-appearing galaxy F in the lower left of this
image has now been identified as a foreground galaxy at a distance of
about 35 million light years, leaving the group originally identified
as Stephan=92s Quintet with only a quartet of galaxies. However, if we
include galaxy C, which is at the same distance as the other four
galaxies, it becomes a quintet again!
Ginevra Trinchieri of the INAF-Brera Observatory in Milan, Italy, Jack
Sulentic of the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa, and Dieter
Brietschwerdt and Wolfgang Pietsch of the Max-Planck Institute for
Extraterrestrial Physics in Garching, Germany are co-authors of a paper
that describes the Chandra data on Stephan’s Quintet. The paper will
appear in an upcoming issue of the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics
(astro-ph 0302590).
NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., manages the
Chandra program, and TRW, Inc., Redondo Beach, Calif., is the prime for
the spacecraft. The Smithsonian’s Chandra X-ray Center controls science
and flight operations from Cambridge, Mass., for the Headquarters,
Washington.
Images and additional information about this result are available at:
http://chandra.harvard.edu
and
http://chandra.nasa.gov