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Hubble Captures an Extraordinary and Powerful Active Galaxy

A spiral galaxy that is white in its center and red at its edges. Purple gas rises up and out of the white center in the shape of a "V."
Resembling a swirling witch's cauldron of glowing vapors, the black hole-powered core of a nearby active galaxy appears in this colorful NASA Hubble Space Telescope image. The galaxy lies 13 million light-years away in the southern constellation Circinus. This galaxy is...

The Hubble telescope has taken a snapshot of a nearby active galaxy known as Circinus. This active galaxy belongs to a class of mostly spiral galaxies called Seyferts, which have compact centers and are believed to contain massive black holes. Seyfert galaxies are themselves part of a larger class of objects called Active Galactic Nuclei or AGN. AGN have the ability to remove gas from the centers of their galaxies by blowing it out into space at phenomenal speeds. Astronomers studying the Circinus galaxy are seeing evidence of a powerful AGN at its center.

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Last Updated
Mar 20, 2025
Contact
Media

Claire Andreoli
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center
Greenbelt, Maryland
claire.andreoli@nasa.gov

Release Credit

NASA, Andrew Wilson (UMD), Patrick Shopbell (Caltech), Chris Simpson (Subaru Telescope), Thaisa Storchi-Bergmann (UFRGS), F. K. B. Barbosa (UFRGS), Martin Ward (University of Leicester)