Suggested Searches

1 min read

“X” Structure at Core of Whirlpool Galaxy (M51)

"X" Structure at Core of Whirlpool Galaxy (M51)
This image of the core of the nearby spiral galaxy M51, taken with the Wide Field Planetary camera (in PC mode) on NASA's Hubble Space Telescope, shows a striking , dark "X" silhouetted across the galaxy's nucleus. The "X" is due to absorption by dust and marks the exact position of a black hole which may have a mass equivalent to one-million stars like the sun. The darkest bar may be an edge-on dust ring which is 100 light-years in diameter. The edge-on torus not only hides the black hole and accretion disk from being viewed directly from earth, but also determines the axis of a jet of high-speed plasma and confines radiation from the accretion disk to a pair of oppositely directed cones of light, which ionize gas caught in their beam. The second bar of the "X" could be a second disk seen edge on, or possibly rotating gas and dust in MS1 intersecting with the jets and ionization cones. The size of the image is 1100 light-years.

About the Object

  • R.A. Position
    R.A. PositionRight ascension – analogous to longitude – is one component of an object's position.
    13h 29m 52.36s
  • Dec. Position
    Dec. PositionDeclination – analogous to latitude – is one component of an object's position.
    47° 11' 40.8"
  • Object Name
    Object NameA name or catalog number that astronomers use to identify an astronomical object.
    M51, Whirlpool Galaxy
  • Release Date
    June 8, 1992
  • Science Release
    NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope Resolves a Dark “x” Across the Nucleus of M51
  • Credit
    Credit: H. Ford (JHU/STScI), the Faint Object Spectrograph IDT, and NASA

Downloads

  • 2169 × 2025
    jpg (95.49 KB)
  • 2169 × 2025
    tif (7.79 MB)
  • 800 × 746
    jpg (22.01 KB)
  • 200 × 200
    jpg (4.58 KB)
  • 300 × 280
    jpg (12.62 KB)

Share

Details

Last Updated
Mar 14, 2025
Contact
Media

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