This newly revised NASA Hubble Jam Telescope describe of the Hickson Compact Neighborhood 31 (HCG 31) of galaxies highlights streams of superstar-formation as four dwarf galaxies have interaction. The intense, distorted clump of younger blue-white stars (high-stunning of center) is NGC 1741. Though it seems a single galaxy, NGC 1741 is de facto a pair of colliding dwarf galaxies. One other dwarf, cigar-fashioned galaxy to the pair’s stunning joins their dance with a skinny, blue hasten of stars that connects the trio. HGC 31’s fourth member is published by a hasten of younger blue stars that prove the galaxy (bottom-left of center) and prove its interplay with the opposite three. The intense object in the heart of the image is a superstar located between Earth and HCG 31.
Dwarf galaxy encounters are usually viewed billions of gentle-years away, and resulting from this reality happened billions of years in the past, however HCG 31 is found some 166 million gentle-years from Earth, somewhat inside of compare cosmic standards. The newly revised describe emphasizes superstar-forming regions spurred by the quartet’s gravitational dance. The color blue represents visible blue gentle and showcases younger, sizzling, blue stars, whereas the color red