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Interview with Dr. William Keel (3rd of 4 clips): Pertains to Us
- Release DateJanuary 6, 2004
- Science ReleaseToo Fast, Too Furious: A Galaxy’s Fatal Plunge
- CreditB. McDaniel and C. Clark (U. Alabama)
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Too Fast, Too Furious: A Galaxy's Fatal Plunge
These images offer a dramatic look at a spiral galaxy like our Milky Way being ripped apart as it races at 4.5 million miles per hour through the heart of a distant cluster of galaxies. The images, taken over several wavelengths, provide evidence of the "galactic assault and...

A Disintegrating Galaxy Plows Through Space
This is an artist's conception of the spiral galaxy C153. The galaxy looks peculiar because it is plowing through the heart of a distant galaxy cluster at 4.5 million miles per hour. Gas compressed along the galaxy's leading edge, like snow before a plow, ignited a firestorm of...

Zoom into the Spiral Galaxy C153
A Zoom into the C153 spiral galaxy found in the galaxy cluster Abell 2125. The initial view moves from the NOAO telescope mosaic into the Hubble Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 image of C153. This Hubble image then dissolves into a colorful composite detail of X-ray, radio, UV and...

Interview with Dr. William Keel (1st of 4 clips): What's Happening in C153
First of four interview clips with Dr. William Keel, Professor of Astronomy at the University of Alabama. Topic discussions on what is happening in galaxy C153, the scientific implications, how this could pertain to us and why the different observations were used.

Interview with Dr. William Keel (2nd of 4 clips): Scientific Implications
Second of four interview clips with Dr. William Keel, Professor of Astronomy at the University of Alabama. Topic discussions on what is happening in galaxy C153, the scientific implications, how this could pertain to us and why the different observations were used.

Interview with Dr. William Keel (4th of 4 clips): Different Observations
Fourth of four interview clips with Dr. William Keel, Professor of Astronomy at the University of Alabama. Topic discussions on what is happening in galaxy C153, the scientific implications, how this could pertain to us and why the different observations were used.
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Claire Andreoli
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center
Greenbelt, Maryland
claire.andreoli@nasa.gov