
The appearance of a galaxy can depend
strongly on the color of the light with which it is viewed. The Hubble Heritage
image of NGC 6782 illustrates a pronounced example of this effect. This spiral
galaxy, when seen in visible light, exhibits tightly wound spiral arms that give
it a pinwheel shape similar to that of many other spirals. However, when the
galaxy is viewed in ultraviolet light with NASA's Hubble Space Telescope, its
shape is startlingly different.
Ultraviolet light has a shorter wavelength than ordinary visible light, and is
emitted from stars that are much hotter than the Sun. At ultraviolet
wavelengths, which are rendered as blue in the Hubble image, NGC 6782 shows a
spectacular, nearly circular bright ring surrounding its nucleus. The ring marks
the presence of many recently formed hot stars.
Two faint, dusty spiral arms emerge from the outer edge of the blue ring and are
seen silhouetted against the golden light of older and fainter stars. A
scattering of blue stars at the outer edge of NGC 6782 in the shape of two dim
spiral arms shows that some star formation is occurring there too. The inner
ring surrounds a small central bulge and a bar of stars, dust, and gas. This
ring is itself part of a larger dim bar that ends in these two outer spiral
arms. Astronomers are trying to understand the relationship between the star
formation seen in the ultraviolet light and how the bars may help localize the
star formation into a ring.
NGC 6782 is a relatively nearby galaxy, residing about 183 million light-years
from Earth. The light from galaxies at much larger distances is stretched to
longer, redder wavelengths ["redshifted"], due to the expansion of the universe.
This means that if astronomers want to compare visible-light images of very
distant galaxies with galaxies in our own neighborhood, they should use
ultraviolet images of the nearby ones. Astronomers find that the distant
galaxies tend to have different structures than nearby ones, even when they use
the correct procedure of comparing visible light in distant galaxies with
ultraviolet light from nearby ones. Since the distant galaxies are seen as they
were billions of years ago, such observations are evidence that galaxies evolve
with time.
The Hubble image of NGC 6782 was taken with the Wide Field Planetary Camera 2
(WFPC2) in June 2000 as part of an ultraviolet survey of 37 nearby galaxies. The
observations were carried out by an international "Hubble mid-UV team" led by
Dr. Rogier Windhorst of Arizona State University. Additional observations of NGC
6782 were made by the Hubble Heritage Team in June 2001. The color image was
produced by combining data from both observing programs that were taken through
color filters in the WFPC2 camera that isolated ultraviolet, blue, visible, and
infrared light.