Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. News

Practically perfect in every way: Hubble shows galaxy with amazing symmetry

Add as a preferred source on Google

This Hubble Picture of the Week shows spiral galaxy NGC 2985 in the constellation of Ursa Major (The Great Bear). ESA/Hubble & NASA, L. Ho

This week’s Hubble image shows the spiral galaxy NGC 2985, located over 70 million light-years away in the constellation of Ursa Major (The Great Bear). It is an archetypal spiral galaxy, like our Milky Way, meaning it has arms of stars reaching out from its center. The galaxy is about 95,000 light-years across with a supermassive black hole at its center that is 160 million times the mass of our Sun.

Recommended Videos

Hubble scientists describe NGC 2985 as having “near-perfect symmetry,” showing tightly wound spiral arms which converge in the center of the galaxy as its brightest point. As the spiral arms reach out into space, they gradually fade and dissipate.

The outer spiral arm is so large that it encircles the galaxy, forming a “pseudo ring” around it. The outer part of the galaxy is relatively stable, unlike the center where collisions are common and instability is high. It is theorized that the instability of the center portion is due to the presence of molecular clouds, also known as stellar nurseries. These regions are opaque clouds with a higher density of hydrogen and other gases and dust. This dust forms into clumps, which are the very first stages of star formation.

The molecular clouds are more dense than the interstellar medium in which they float, and within the clouds the dust blocks out light. So the interior of the clouds are very cold and dark. This means that deep within the cloud, instabilities can occur because of the low temperature and density. Scientist are still trying to understand how these conditions lead to the formation of unusual particles like hydroisocyanic acid (HNC), which normally converts to the more stable hydrocyanic acid (HCN).

This color image was created by combining a number of different images taken in different spectrums. Hubble’s Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) took a number of separate exposures showing wavelengths in the visible and near-infrared portions of the spectrum. The colors were determined by assigning different hues to the monochromatic images, with individual filters applied. The bright blue dots in the image represent regions of busy activity and star formation.

Georgina Torbet
Georgina has been the space writer at Digital Trends space writer for six years, covering human space exploration, planetary…
Chrome is getting better at understanding the breaks and punctations you never say out loud
Voice typing in Chrome is about to feel much more natural
Google Chrome on Android Featured

Google is quietly making voice dictation in Chrome feel a lot more natural. With the latest Chrome 151 Beta, the company is introducing a new capability that allows the browser's speech recognition engine to automatically infer punctuation based on the way people speak, eliminating the need to explicitly say commands like "comma" or "full stop."

The update may sound minor at first glance, but it addresses one of the biggest frustrations with voice typing: speaking naturally often produces text that lacks punctuation unless users consciously dictate every punctuation mark. By teaching Chrome to understand pauses, rhythm, and speech patterns, Google is taking another step toward making conversations with computers feel more human.

Read more
Horror films play music to warn about danger. These headphones use the same trick to save you from robots
Spherephones replaces factory alarms with music that tells you what is coming and from where.
spherephones-georgia-tech

The ear has always processed what is coming before the eye does. In horror movies, the music always tells you something bad is coming. Now researchers at Georgia Tech are using the same idea in real life to keep factory workers safe around robots.

They have built a wearable headset called Spherephones that converts nearby robot movement into spatial music, giving you a warning before a machine gets too close. It helps the user stay aware without breaking their attention.

Read more
Elon Musk refutes report claiming that an AI device is in development at SpaceX
The billionair's two-word denial on X doesn't explain what part of the Wall Street Journal's report he's disputing.
Elon Musk speaking into a microphone with a blue background

Elon Musk has denied a Wall Street Journal report claiming SpaceX showed investors a prototype AI device before its recent IPO. "Utterly false," Musk wrote on X, responding to a post about the report that has since been deleted, offering no further explanation.

A denial that leaves more questions than it answers

Read more