Straight Shot: Hubble Investigates Galaxy with Nine Rings

February 04, 2025 10:00AM (EST)Release ID: 2025-006
A large galaxy is at center, and a significantly smaller galaxy is to its bottom left, almost cut in half. The large galaxy, nicknamed the Bullseye, is mostly face-on, but the top appears slightly tilted away. It has several rings. Its circular core is bright white at the very center, but light yellow overall. Going outward, there are gaps between the rings. The core is surrounded by two slightly lighter yellow rings, which also appear to be overlapping. The next ring is slightly more transparent and yellow. The two or three rings that are farther out are bluer, sometimes with blue clumps. The widest ring is also blue, but also the most transparent. The small dwarf galaxy looks like it could be about the same size as the yellow core of the Bullseye. The dwarf galaxy is blue. The background of space is black, which is dotted with a range of galaxies in different shapes, colors, and sizes.

Summary

Hubble’s high-resolution imagery allowed researchers to hone in on more of the Bullseye galaxy’s rings — and helped confirm which galaxy dove through its core.

Seabirds like the Northern Gannet plunge directly into the sea in pursuit of fish, sometimes from as high as 100 feet (30 meters). The birds’ spear-like bills and expertly tucked wings minimize splash upon impact, but water still ripples out in tiny waves.

Now, let’s switch to space — and swap the bird for a tiny galaxy and the ocean for a vast galaxy.

A tiny blue dwarf galaxy flew through the far more massive Bullseye galaxy 50 million years ago with similar effects, producing at least nine star-filled rings in its larger companion. In space, those “waves” ripple out differently. The gas, dust, and stars are pushed both inward and outward.

Seeing an effect like this in great detail is highly unusual. Both the Hubble Space Telescope and the W. M. Keck Observatory in Hawaii proved that the Bullseye galaxy has nine rings — six more than any other known galaxy. Plus, Hubble identified which galaxy dropped through the Bullseye’s core: The blue dwarf galaxy that now “sits” directly to its left.

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