Keywords: The Majestic Sombrero Galaxy (M104).jpg en NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has trained its razor-sharp eye on one of the universe's most stately and photogenic galaxies the Sombrero galaxy Messier 104 M104 The galaxy's hallmark is a brilliant white bulbous core encircled by the thick dust lanes comprising the spiral structure of the galaxy As seen from Earth the galaxy is tilted nearly edge-on We view it from just six degrees north of its equatorial plane This brilliant galaxy was named the Sombrero because of its resemblance to the broad rim and high-topped Mexican hat At a relatively bright magnitude of +8 M104 is just beyond the limit of naked-eye visibility and is easily seen through small telescopes The Sombrero lies at the southern edge of the rich Virgo cluster of galaxies and is one of the most massive objects in that group equivalent to 800 billion suns The galaxy is 50 000 light-years across and is located 28 million light-years from Earth Hubble easily resolves M104's rich system of globular clusters estimated to be nearly 2 000 in number -- 10 times as many as orbit our Milky Way galaxy The ages of the clusters are similar to the clusters in the Milky Way ranging from 10-13 billion years old Embedded in the bright core of M104 is a smaller disk which is tilted relative to the large disk X-ray emission suggests that there is material falling into the compact core where a 1-billion-solar-mass black hole resides 2013-01-30 21 53 38 http //solarsystem nasa gov/multimedia/display cfm Category Planets IM_ID 9967 NASA and The Hubble Heritage Team STScI/AURA PD-USGov Uploaded with UploadWizard Sombrero Galaxy |