Galaxy mergers were much more common in the early universe than they are today. Detailed observations of nearby mergers help astronomers assess the energetic nature of their distant counterparts. To mark the 18th anniversary of the launch of the Hubble Space Telescope , in April NASA and the European Space Agency released 59 new images of colliding galaxies, culled from the telescope’s 32 terabytes of data.
This image from the collection is a false-color composite of pictures taken in the 0.4-µm and 0.9-µm bands. It shows a pair of spiral galaxies, collectively known as UGC 09618, in their early stages of interaction 450 million light-years from Earth. Already, this so-called luminous infrared galaxy merger is emitting more than 20 times the total energy of our Milky Way galaxy. The emission is a combination of light from young, bright stars–formed as gravitationally shocked gas is compressed–and from a bright accretion disk...