Hubble Image of the Week – Starbursts in Virgo (NGC 4536)

Hubble Image of the Week Starbursts in NGC 4536

NGC 4536 is located roughly 50 million light-years away in the constellation of Virgo and it is a hub of extreme star formation. Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA

This new Hubble image of the week gives us a closer look at the starburst region in NGC 4536.

Galaxy formation and evolution are still far from being fully understood. Luckily, the conditions found within certain galaxies — like starburst galaxies — can tell us a lot about how they have evolved over time. Starburst galaxies contain regions where stars are forming at such a breakneck rate that the galaxy is eating up its gas supply faster than it can be replenished!

NGC 4536 is just such a galaxy, captured here in beautiful detail by the Hubble’s Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) as the image of the week. NGC 4536 is located roughly 50 million light-years away in the constellation of Virgo and it is a hub of extreme star formation. There are several different factors that can lead to such an ideal environment in which stars can form at such a rapid rate. Importantly there has to be a sufficiently massive supply of gas, which might be acquired in a number of ways — for example by passing very close to another galaxy, in a full-blown galactic collision, or as a result of some event that forces lots of gas into a relatively small space.

Star formation leaves a few tell-tale fingerprints, allowing astronomers to tell where stars have been born. We know that starburst regions are rich in gas. Young stars in these extreme environments often live fast and die young, burning extremely hot and exhausting their gas supplies fairly quickly. These stars also emit huge amounts of intense ultraviolet light, which blasts the electrons off any atoms of hydrogen lurking nearby (a process called ionization), leaving behind clouds of ionized hydrogen (known in astronomer-speak as HII regions).

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