
When morning twilight came to the
Paranal Observatory in Chile, astronomers Mark Neeser and Peter Barthel interrupted their search for faint
quasars, billions of light-years away. And just for a moment, they used
Very Large Telescopes at the European Southern Observatory to appreciate the beauty of the nearby Universe. One result was
this stunning view of beautiful
barred spiral galaxy
NGC 613, a mere 65 million light-years away in the southern constellation
Sculptor. Over 100 thousand light-years across,
NGC 613 seems to have more than its fair share of spiral arms laced with cosmic dust clouds and bright star forming regions near the ends of a dominant central bar. Radio emission indicates the presence of a massive
black hole at the center of
NGC 613.
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