Webb telescope captures stunning new image of the "Sombrero galaxy"

Webb telescope captures stunning new image of the “Sombrero galaxy”

NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope has returned incredible new photos of the Sombrero galaxy, offering a new look at the region. 

The Sombrero galaxy, named for its resemblance to the Mexican hat, is about 30 million light-years from Earth, NASA said in a news release. The galaxy is surrounded by multiple rings, where stars are formed. At its center is a supermassive black hole that emits a bright jet of light and consumes material from inside the galaxy. Both the rings and black hole are relatively docile, NASA said, and neither creates much solar activity each year. 

What sets the galaxy apart is its 2,000 globular clusters, or collections of hundreds of thousands of old stars held together by gravity, according to NASA. These clusters allow astronomers to study stars, since there are thousands of stars in one area. The stars are roughly the same age, but they vary in many other ways, allowing scientists to compare them. 

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NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope recently imaged the Sombrero galaxy with its MIRI.

NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI


Photos taken by the Webb telescope’s Mid-Infrared Instrument, or MIRI, reveals a new texture in the galaxy’s outer ring and details the dust along the ring. Such dust is an “essential building block” for solar objects, NASA said. 

Kerry Breen

Source: cbsnews.com