viernes, 22 de enero de 2016

OLGA VALENTIN PRADO: OLGA VALENTIN PRADO: NASA’s SDO Sees Tangled Conne...

OLGA VALENTIN PRADO: OLGA VALENTIN PRADO: NASA’s SDO Sees Tangled Conne...: OLGA VALENTIN PRADO: NASA’s SDO Sees Tangled Connections : Jan. 21, 2016 NASA’s SDO ...

OLGA VALENTIN PRADO: PLANET II

OLGA VALENTIN PRADO: PLANET II: However, after a huge amount of studies, he and his partner found that the theory of Planet Nine is the only one that explains the phenomeno...

OLGA VALENTIN PRADO: PLANET

OLGA VALENTIN PRADO: PLANET: Phattie first evidence of the possible ninth planet in the Solar System Caltech scientists found the first evidence of Phattie the possibl...

PLANET II

However, after a huge amount of studies, he and his partner found that the theory of Planet Nine is the only one that explains the phenomenon.
"Murderer of Pluto"
So far Brown was known as one of the men responsible for that Pluto no longer considered a planet.
His discovery of more than 30 dwarf planets Eris among them, a bigger star than Pluto led the International Astronomical Union (IAU in English) reclassify its definition of what constitutes a planet and Pluto relegated to the category of dwarf planet.
Brown Wednesday which tweets under the nicknameplutokiller (Pluto murderer) - told reporters he hoped his new announcement reproach him who claimed to have left the solar system with only eight planets.
That includes his own daughter.
"She still mad at me for half Pluto's relegation, although he had just been born when it happened," he told The Washington Post.
"A few years ago suggested that forgive me if I find a new planet, so I guess I've worked on this for her," he said.
Credibility
But can it really be said that a new planet was found?
How reliable is the announcement?
BBC asked him the director of the Planetary Science Division of the National Administration of Aeronautics and Space of the United States, better known as NASA.
In an exclusive interview, Jim Green told this newspaper that both Brown and Batygin are highly qualified scientists, leaders in their field.
He stressed the importance of their research.
"This is a huge step forward to understand what happens in a region of our solar system that we know virtually nothing," said the objects found beyond Pluto in question.
"It's a really important point," he added.
However, NASA managers said that will require many more observations to confirm the theory of these experts, since the presence of a ninth planet "can not be the only explanation for what they saw."
Processes
Adriana Ocampo, head of the New Horizons (New Frontiers) NASA program in 2015 revealed previously unseen images of Pluto, he told the BBC that it is common planetary discoveries begin with predictions.
New Horizons Mission: Pluto is now shown in full color
"The existence of both Neptune and Pluto was predicted long before they were first seen," he said.
However, the expert noted that the announcement of a ninth planet is only a "possibility" and that it becomes a fact, the existence of the star must be supported by at least half a dozen space observatories.
In that sense, Ocampo noted that the importance of work released this Wednesday is that more scientists will be in search of this alleged Planet Nine, which will increase the chances that one be found, if it exists.
Colombian responsible for the "Ferrari" NASA
Brown himself said he published his work with that hope.
"If other people astrónomos- -best get excited about the idea of ​​finding Planet Nine maybe we can see it in a couple of years," esperanzó.

PLANET

Phattie first evidence of the possible ninth planet in the Solar System

Caltech scientists found the first evidence of Phattie the possible ninth planet in the Solar System.
Their results, published in the Astronomical Journal, were made possible thanks to the mathematical modeling and computer simulation.


A little over a century, an eccentric millionaire obsessed with astronomy. Not that Percival Lowell was interested only by scan the sky from his observatory in Arizona, but also gave fuel to false hypotheses as he spoke of the existence of alleged "canals" on Mars. But perhaps his most famous extravagance, she says Daniel Marin in his blog, was the search for Planet X. A hidden world located on the edge of the solar system, which according to the calculations of Lowell, should present a mass 6.6 times above the Earth.
The millionaire turned-astronomer came to shoot twice to Pluto in 1915, but did not notice his discovery. A year later, Lowell died without having achieved his greatest challenge. The challenge was proposed again in 1929, when the director of Lowell Observatory decided to instruct the young Clyde Tombaugh the search for the mysterious and enigmatic planet X. With a telescope of 31 centimeters, Tombaugh discovered in 1930 the world would have liked to see both Lowell. Pluto was the ninth planet in the solar system at that time, which received its name thanks to the imagination of Venetia Burney, an eleven years. The remaining part of the story: Pluto no longer a planet in 2006 by decision of the International Astronomical Union and prompted NASA's New Horizons mission to learn more about this dwarf planet.

But the old dream of Percival Lowell now has a new surprise. Scientists at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) have found the first evidence of the existence of the ninth planet, which have informally referred to as Phattie. Their preliminary results have been published in the Astronomical Journal and show that the "Planet Nine" could have a mass ten times that of Earth. According to his calculations, this hypothetical new planet would take between 10,000 and 20,000 years to make one complete revolution of the sun.

The findings of their study, however, be taken with a lot of caution. First, as recognized from Caltech, evidence has been obtained through mathematical modeling and computer simulations. In other words, astronomers have not been able to directly observe Phattie. To do this, this would be a "real world" and would present a mass 5,000 times that of Pluto, which would be part of that category of dwarves-and planets of the solar system planets. Their results explain in principle some mysterious characteristics of icy, rocky objects that can be seen in the Kuiper belt. In particular, the ninth planet hypothetical justify some of the odd orbits presented by these bodies.

Although the study rekindled the hopes of observing the ninth planet in the solar system, the scientific community urges caution when analyzing these results. Researchers like Hal Levison of the Southwest Research Institute in Colorado, in Nature argues that "has seen many claims of this kind in his career and that all were wrong." One of the study's authors, Konstantin Batygin, however, explains that it is "strong evidence" to justify the planetary census of the solar system is incomplete. Jim Green, director of NASA's planetary science, told the Washington Post that "there could be other explanations for the strange movements of objects in the Kuiper belt." "We must apply the rule of Sagan [which states that" extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence "]," says Green, who challenged scientists to directly observe the existence of the ninth planet to prove that Phattie is a reality. Therefore, we expect to have more research to see which one is the reality. Will the ninth planet Phattie finally discover he craved Lowell in his day?





They discovered a new ninth planet in the Solar System
All life taught us that the Earth has eight planets "neighbors" and that among the nine form the solar system.
A few years ago, in 2006, we revolutionized astronomers to confirm our beliefs actually are only eight planets, because Pluto is too small to fall within that category.
Why Pluto objective of the New Horizons mission, no longer planet?
Now one of the experts responsible for "down" status of Pluto again surprised with a new ad: yes would end nine planets, as there is one until now unknown, hidden in the farthest reaches of our system.
The expert from the prestigious California Institute of Technology (Caltech) Michael Brown published together with his colleague Konstantin Batygin research that describes the star like a giant ice planet that would be beyond the orbit of Pluto.
According to the study, which was published Wednesday in The Astronomical Journal (The Astronomical Journal), this planet would have a size between five and ten times larger than the Earth.
And it takes between 10,000 and 20,000 years to circle the sun.
But despite providing these details, Brown and Batygin admit that they have never seen such a planet and there is also no reliable record of their presence.
The announcement of their existence is based on observations that account for the presence of a "massive disturbing" that affects the trajectory of other space objects.
According to experts, the "disturbing" that this star would have dubbed the "Nine Planet".
Inference
These smaller space objects that were observed include a series of dwarf planets recently discovered by Brown and other scientists in the solar system.
Astronomers noticed that the orbits of these bodies appear to be influenced by the gravity of a hidden planet.
Brown and Batygin actually were not the first to notice: in 2014 two scientists, Scott Sheppard of the Carnegie Institute of Science and Chad Trujillo of the Gemini Observatory in Hawaii, made the same observation.
They saw that the orbits of some space bodies go out of their path in the same quadrant of the solar system and are inclined at the same angle.
They attributed to the existence of a large planet whose gravitational field was "pushing" to those objects.
Brown revealed that actually began researching the subject not to confirm but to refute that theory.
According to astronomer, whenever strangers typical orbital behavior is attributed to the existence of unknown planets are observed.

300 Consecutive Days in Space!

300 Consecutive Days in Space!

Today marks astronaut Scott Kelly’s 300th day in space! He, along with Russian cosmonaut Mikhail Kornienko, are testing the limits of human research during their one-year mission onboard theInternational Space Station.
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While most expeditions to the space station last four to six months, their time on orbit has been doubled. By increasing the length of their time in space, researchers hope to better understand how the human body reacts and adapts to long-duration spaceflight.

What happens when you’ve been in space for 300 days?

1. You might get bored and play ping pong with yourself…and a water droplet.
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2. There’s a chance that you’ll get a Tweet from someone famous…like the President!

3. There may come a time where you’ll have to fix something outside the station during aspacewalk.
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4. You might develop a ‘green thumb’ and grow plants in space.
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5. And, there’s no doubt you get to see the Earth from a totally new perspective.
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To learn more about the one-year mission, visit: https://www.nasa.gov/1ym 
Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com

OLGA VALENTIN PRADO: NASA’s SDO Sees Tangled Connections

OLGA VALENTIN PRADO: NASA’s SDO Sees Tangled Connections: Jan. 21, 2016 NASA’s SDO Sees Tangled Connections These images from NASA&#39...

NASA’s SDO Sees Tangled Connections

Jan. 21, 2016

NASA’s SDO Sees Tangled Connections

These images from NASA's Solar Dynamic Observatory, or SDO, show magnetically active regions on the sun on Jan. 8-9, 2016. When such regions are close-set, magnetic field lines create a tangle of arches snaking through the solar atmosphere. Those lines are visible in this movie because charged particles spin along them, emitting extreme ultraviolet light observable by SDO. Watch the movie to see how the magnetic field lines are constantly connecting, breaking apart, and reconnecting among the several active regions – a robust illustration of how our dynamic sun is constantly on the move
This video was captured in extreme ultraviolet wavelengths of 171 angstroms. Though typically invisible to our eyes, the extreme ultraviolet images are colorized here in gold.Steele Hill and Sarah Frazier

A New Planet In Our Solar System? NASA Takes A Look

NASA’s SDO Sees Tangled Connections

OLGA VALENTIN PRADO: Blizzard 2016 from Space

OLGA VALENTIN PRADO: Blizzard 2016 from Space: Blizzard 2016 from Space As an intense winter storm approaches the mid-Atlantic this weekend, our  satellites watch  from above. The stor...

Hubble Unveils a Tapestry of Dazzling Diamond-like Stars

Hubble Unveils a Tapestry of Dazzling Diamond-like Stars

Resembling an opulent diamond tapestry, this image from NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope shows a glittering star cluster that contains a collection of some of the brightest stars seen in our Milky Way galaxy. Called Trumpler 14, it is located 8,000 light-years away in the Carina Nebula, a huge star-formation region. Because the cluster is only 500,000 years old, it has one of the highest concentrations of massive, luminous stars in the entire Milky Way.
The small, dark knot left of center is a nodule of gas laced with dust, and seen in silhouette.
A glittering star cluster
Resembling an opulent diamond tapestry, this image from NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope shows a glittering star cluster that contains a collection of some of the brightest stars seen in our Milky Way galaxy.
Credits: NASA, ESA, and J. Maíz Apellániz (Institute of Astrophysics of Andalusia, Spain), Acknowledgment: N. Smith (University of Arizona)
These blue-white stars are burning their hydrogen fuel so ferociously they will explode as supernovae in just a few million years. The combination of outflowing stellar “winds” and, ultimately, supernova blast waves will carve out cavities in nearby clouds of gas and dust. These fireworks will kick-start the beginning of a new generation of stars in an ongoing cycle of star birth and death.
This composite image of Trumpler 14 was made with data taken in 2005-2006 with Hubble's Advanced Camera for Surveys. Blue, visible and infrared broadband filters combine with filters that isolate hydrogen and nitrogen emission from the glowing gas surrounding the open cluster.
For images and more information about Hubble, visit:
For additional information, contact:
Ray Villard
Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore, Maryland
410-338-4514
villard@stsci.edu
Credit: NASA/ESA/J. Maíz Apellániz (Institute of Astrophysics of Andalusia, Spain)

Blizzard 2016 from Space

Blizzard 2016 from Space

As an intense winter storm approaches the mid-Atlantic this weekend, our satellites watch from above. The storm is expected to produce a wade swath of more than 2 feet of snow in some areas.
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The below supercomputer simulation crunched the data to provide a look at the flow of clouds from storm systems around the globe, including the developing blizzard across the eastern United States.
This storm won’t only have a snowy impact on the mid-Atlantic region, but will also cause severe weather in the Gulf Coast. Satellites observe extreme rainfall in the area.
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Data from NASA-NOAA Suomi NPP satellite and NOAA’s GOES-East satellite are being used to create images and animation of the movement of this powerful storm. For updates, visit:http://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/2016/nasa-sees-major-winter-storm-headed-for-eastern-us
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Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com

OLGA VALENTIN PRADO: NOVENO PLANETA II

OLGA VALENTIN PRADO: NOVENO PLANETA II: Sin embargo, después de una enorme cantidad de estudios, él y su socio determinaron que la teoría del Planeta Nueve es la única que explica ...

OLGA VALENTIN PRADO: noveno planeta

OLGA VALENTIN PRADO: noveno planeta: Primeras evidencias de Phattie, el posible noveno planeta del Sistema Solar Científicos de Caltech hallan las primeras evidencias de Phatt...

NOVENO PLANETA II

Sin embargo, después de una enorme cantidad de estudios, él y su socio determinaron que la teoría del Planeta Nueve es la única que explica el fenómeno.
"Asesino de Plutón"
Hasta ahora Brown era conocido como uno de los hombres responsables de que Plutón deje de ser considerado un planeta.
Su hallazgo de más de 30 planetas enanos -entre ellos Eris, un astro más grande que Plutón- llevó a que la Unión Astronómica Internacional (IAU por sus siglas en inglés) reclasificara su definición de lo que constituye un planeta y relegara a Plutón a la categoría de planeta enano.
Este miércoles Brown -que tuitea bajo el apodo @plutokiller (asesino de Plutón)- dijo a la prensa que espera que su nuevo anuncio lo reivindique ante quienes le recriminan haber dejado al sistema solar con solo ocho planetas.
Eso incluye a su propia hija.
"Ella sigue medio enojada conmigo por el relegamiento de Plutón, a pesar de que apenas había nacido cuando ocurrió", contó al diario The Washington Post.
"Hace unos años sugirió que me perdonaría si encuentro un nuevo planeta, así que supongo que he trabajado en esto por ella", dijo.
Credibilidad
Pero ¿puede realmente decirse que se halló un nuevo planeta?
¿Cuán confiable es el anuncio?
BBC Mundo se lo preguntó al director de la División de Ciencia Planetaria de la Administración Nacional de la Aeronáutica y del Espacio de Estados Unidos, más conocida como la NASA.
En una entrevista exclusiva, Jim Green dijo a este medio que tanto Brown como Batygin son científicos altamente calificados, líderes en su campo.
Y resaltó la importancia de su investigación.
"Este es un enorme paso adelante para poder entender lo que ocurre en una región de nuestro sistema solar de la que virtualmente no sabemos nada", señaló en referencia a los objetos que se encuentran más allá de Plutón.
"Es una observación realmente importante", agregó.
No obstante, el directivo de la NASA aclaró que se requerirá de muchas más observaciones para confirmar la teoría de estos expertos, ya que la presencia de un noveno planeta "capaz no sea la única explicación para lo que observaron".
Procesos
Adriana Ocampo, responsable del programa New Horizons (Nuevas Fronteras) de la NASA, que en 2015 reveló imágenes nunca antes vistas de Plutón, dijo a BBC Mundo que es común que los hallazgos planetarios comiencen con predicciones.
Misión New Horizons: Plutón se muestra ahora a todo color
"La existencia tanto de Neptuno como de Plutón se predijo mucho antes de que fueran vistos por primera vez", contó.
Sin embargo, la experta señaló que el anuncio de un noveno planeta es solo una "posibilidad" y que para que se convierta en un hecho, la existencia del astro debe ser corroborada por al menos media docena de observatorios espaciales.
En ese sentido, Ocampo resaltó que la importancia del trabajo dado a conocer este miércoles es que llevará a que más científicos estén a la búsqueda de este presunto Planeta Nueve, lo que aumentará las posibilidades de que sea hallado, si es que existe.
La colombiana encargada de los "Ferrari" de la NASA
El propio Brown dijo que publicó su trabajo con esa esperanza.
"Si otras personas -mejores astrónomos- se entusiasman con la idea de hallar al Planeta Nueve quizás podamos verlo en un par de años", se esperanzó.

noveno planeta

Primeras evidencias de Phattie, el posible noveno planeta del Sistema Solar

Científicos de Caltech hallan las primeras evidencias de Phattie, el posible noveno planeta del Sistema Solar.
Sus resultados, publicados en Astronomical Journal, han sido posibles gracias a la modelización matemática y la simulación por ordenador.
Hace algo más de un siglo, un excéntrico millonario se obsesionó con la astronomía. No es que Percival Lowell solo se interesara por otear los cielos desde su observatorio de Arizona, sino que además dio pábulo a falsas hipótesis como la que hablaba de la existencia de supuestos "canales" en Marte. Pero quizás su extravagancia más famosa, según cuenta Daniel Marín en su blog, fue la búsqueda del planeta X. Un recóndito mundo situado en los confines del Sistema Solar, que de acuerdo a los cálculos de Lowell, debería presentar una masa 6,6 veces superior a la de la Tierra.



El millonario reconvertido en astrónomo llegó a fotografiar dos veces a Plutón en 1915, pero no se percató de su hallazgo. Un año después, Lowell falleció sin haber alcanzado su gran reto. El desafío fue propuesto de nuevo en 1929, cuando el director del Observatorio Lowell decidió encargar al joven Clyde Tombaugh la búsqueda del misterioso y enigmático planeta X. Con un telescopio de 31 centímetros, Tombaugh descubrió en 1930 el mundo que tanto habría deseado observar Lowell. Se trataba de Plutón, el noveno planeta del Sistema Solar por aquel entonces, que recibió su nombre gracias a la imaginación de Venetia Burney, una niña de once años. El resto forma parte de la historia: Plutón dejó de ser un planeta en 2006 por decisión de la Unión Astronómica Internacional y la NASA impulsó la misión New Horizons para conocer más acerca de este planeta enano.

Pero el viejo sueño de Percival Lowell cuenta ahora con una nueva sorpresa. Científicos del Instituto de Tecnología de California (Caltech) han encontrado las primeras evidencias de la existencia del noveno planeta, al que han denominado informalmente como Phattie. Sus resultados preliminares han sido publicados en la revista Astronomical Journal y muestran que el "Planeta Nueve" podría contar con una masa diez veces superior a la de la Tierra. Según sus cálculos, este hipotético nuevo planeta tardaría entre 10.000 y 20.000 años en dar una vuelta completa al Sol.

Las conclusiones de su estudio, sin embargo, han de tomarse con muchísima prudencia. En primer lugar, según reconocen desde Caltech, las evidencias han sido obtenidas gracias a la modelización matemática y las simulaciones por ordenador. En otras palabras, los astrónomos aún no han sido capaces de observar directamente a Phattie. De lograrlo, estaríamos ante un "planeta real", ya que presentaría una masa 5.000 veces mayor que la de Plutón, lo que haría que formara parte de la categoría de planetas -y no de planetas enanos- del Sistema Solar. Sus resultados explicarían en principio algunas características misteriosas de los objetos helados y rocosos que pueden verse en el cinturón de Kuiper. En particular, el hipotético noveno planeta justificaría algunas de las extrañas órbitas que presentan estos cuerpos.

A pesar de que el estudio reaviva las esperanzas de observar el noveno planeta del Sistema Solar, la comunidad científica pide cautela a la hora de analizar estos resultados. Investigadores como Hal Levison, del Southwest Research Institute de Colorado, sostiene en Nature que "ha visto muchas reivindicaciones de este tipo en su carrera y que todas eran erróneas". Uno de los autores del trabajo, Konstantin Batygin, por el contrario, explica que se trata de "evidencias sólidas" que justifican que el censo planetario del Sistema Solar está incompleto. Jim Green, director de ciencias planetarias de la NASA, declaró al Washington Post que "podría haber otras explicaciones para los extraños movimientos de objetos en el cinturón de Kuiper". "Debemos aplicar la regla de Sagan [que enuncia que "afirmaciones extraordinarias necesitan de pruebas extraordinarias"]", sostiene Green, quien reta a los científicos a observar directamente la existencia del noveno planeta para probar que Phattie es una realidad. Por tanto, deberemos esperar a contar con más investigaciones para comprobar cuál de los tres tiene razón. ¿Será Phattie finalmente el noveno planeta que ansiaba descubrir Lowell en su día?

kkkkkkkkkkkkkkk
bendiciones a nuestros amigos que estuvieron pasando ciclon 
bendiciones a nuestros amigos que estuviron pasando tornados
bendiciones a nuestros amigos que estuvieron pasando practicas en desastres 

 
kkkkkkkkk
descubrieron un nuevo noveno planeta en el Sistema Solar
Toda la vida nos enseñaron que la Tierra tiene ocho planetas "vecinos" y que entre los nueve conforman el Sistema Solar.
Hace unos años, en 2006, los astrónomos revolucionaron nuestras creencias al confirmar que en realidad los planetas son solo ocho, porque Plutón es demasiado pequeño para entrar dentro de esa categoría.
¿Por qué Plutón, objetivo de la misión New Horizons, dejó de ser planeta?
Ahora uno de los expertos responsables por "rebajar" el status de Plutón volvió a sorprender con un nuevo anuncio: al final sí serían nueve los planetas, ya que existe uno hasta ahora desconocido, que se esconde en los confines más lejanos de nuestro sistema.
El experto del prestigioso Instituto de Tecnología de California (Caltech) Michael Brown publicó junto con su colega Konstantin Batygin una investigación que describe al astro como un gigante planeta helado que estaría más allá de la órbita de Plutón.
Según el estudio, que fue publicado este miércoles en la revista The Astronomical Journal (El Periódico Astronómico), este planeta tendría un tamaño entre cinco y diez veces más grande que el de la Tierra.
Y tardaría entre 10.000 y 20.000 años en dar la vuelta al Sol.
Pero a pesar de brindar todos estos detalles, Brown y Batygin admiten que nunca han visto dicho planeta ni tampoco existe un registro fehaciente de su presencia.
El anuncio sobre su existencia está basado en observaciones que dan cuenta de la presencia de un "masivo perturbador" que afecta la trayectoria de otros objetos espaciales.
Según los expertos, el "perturbador" sería este astro al que han bautizado el "Planeta Nueve".
Inferencia
Estos objetos espaciales más pequeños que fueron observados incluyen a una serie de planetas enanos descubiertos recientemente por Brown y otros científicos, dentro del sistema solar.
Los astrónomos notaron que las órbitas de estos cuerpos parecen estar influenciadas por la gravedad de un planeta escondido.
En realidad Brown y Batygin no fueron los primeros en notarlo: en 2014 otros dos científicos, Scott Sheppard del Instituto de Ciencia Carnegie y Chad Trujillo del Observatorio Gemini de Hawái, hicieron la misma observación.
Vieron que las órbitas de algunos cuerpos espaciales se salen de su trayectoria en el mismo cuadrante del sistema solar y que están inclinadas al mismo ángulo.
Lo atribuyeron a la existencia de un enorme planeta cuyo campo gravitacional estaba "empujando" a esos objetos.
Brown reveló que en realidad comenzó a investigar el tema no para confirmar esa teoría sino para refutarla.
Según el astrónomo, cada vez que se observan comportamientos orbitales extraños lo típico es atribuirlo a la existencia de planetas desconocidos.

lunes, 18 de enero de 2016

18 ENRO

This Hubble Space Telescope image shows us a "red and dead" elliptical galaxy -- the product of a collision between two good-sized galaxies that is slowly evolving to become a giant elliptical galaxy. Older ellipticals are nicknamed "red and dead" by astronomers because these bloated galaxies are not producing new, bluer stars, and are thus packed full of old and redder stellar populations. This type of galaxy has grown more and more common as the universe has evolved, with initially small galaxies merging and progressively building up into larger galactic structures over time.
Learn more: http://go.nasa.gov/1Zx9zCB
Image credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA, Acknowledgement: Judy Schmidt