Journey to Giant Elliptical Galaxy NGC 4889 in The Coma Galaxy Cluster | Hubble
The final image shows the elliptical galaxy NGC 4889, also known as Caldwell 35, in front of hundreds of background galaxies, and deeply embedded within the Coma galaxy cluster. Well-hidden from human eyes, there is a gigantic supermassive black hole at the center of the galaxy.
While looking at this image, you have unwittingly become an intergalactic time traveler! NGC 4889 is a galaxy that is truly far, far away—roughly 300 million light-years, or about 1,750,000,000,000,000,000,000 miles. That means the light from NGC 4889 that reaches Earth today is 300 million years old. By observing NGC 4889, the most distant object in the Caldwell catalog, we have the opportunity to peer back in time and see its corner of the cosmos as it was long ago.
NGC 4889, another of astronomer William Herschel’s discoveries, is a giant elliptical galaxy, the largest and brightest galaxy near the center of this Hubble image. It is accompanied by other members of the Coma cluster of galaxies, and is set against a backdrop of hundreds of even more distant galaxies. (One bright star on the right side of the image, and a dimmer star above it, belong to our own galaxy.)
Scientists believe NGC 4889 is about two and a half times larger than the Milky Way. Hidden in the heart of this tranquil-seeming galaxy lies a supermassive black hole. With a mass 21 billion times greater than the Sun, it is the most colossal black hole ever discovered. (For comparison, the black hole at the center of our galaxy is thought to be 4 million times more massive than the Sun.)
Black holes usually spark visions of stars and planets hurtling into the inky blackness of a tornado-like vortex, clutched in the unrelenting grip of unseen forces. While NGC 4889’s black hole used to feed on material in its younger years, astronomers believe its galactic buffet has run out and it has stopped feeding. Not only are stars not being sucked in, brand new stars are actually forming and orbiting peacefully about the black hole.
This image was taken with Hubble's Advanced Camera for Surveys in visible and infrared light. With a magnitude of 11.5, NGC 4889 is best seen using a large telescope under dark skies. As in the Hubble image, a number of fainter galaxies can be seen accompanying NGC 4889 in the field of view. From the Northern Hemisphere, late spring is the ideal time to view the galaxy, which is located in the constellation Coma Berenices. From the Southern Hemisphere, look for it in the late autumn.
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