Deux galaxies se percutent et le JWST montre tout, sans filtre. La danse cosmique est plus violente qu’on l’imaginait. https://fr.euronews.com/next/2025/12/23/image-epoustouflante-du-telescope-james-webb-revele-ce-qui-se-passe-quand-deux-galaxies-se #Space #Astrophysics #JWST #GalaxyMerger
Spectaculaire nouvelle photo spatiale : rencontre de galaxies

Créée à partir des données du télescope spatial James Webb et de l’Observatoire Chandra de rayons X de la NASA, l’image offre aux scientifiques une rare vue de face de la dynamique d’interaction et de fusion des galaxies.

euronews
Apocalypse When? No Certainty of a Milky Way -- Andromeda Collision

It is commonly believed that our own Milky Way is on a collision course with the neighbouring Andromeda galaxy. As a result of their merger, predicted in around five billion years, the two large spiral galaxies that define the present Local Group would form a new elliptical galaxy. Here we consider the latest and most accurate observations by the Gaia and Hubble space telescopes, along with recent consensus mass estimates to derive possible future scenarios and identify the major sources of uncertainty in the evolution of the Local Group over the next 10 billion years. We find that the next most massive Local Group member galaxies -- namely, M33 and the Large Magellanic Cloud -- distinctly and radically affect the Milky Way - Andromeda orbit. While including M33 increases the merger probability, the orbit of the Large Magellanic Cloud runs perpendicular to the Milky Way - Andromeda orbit and makes their merger less likely. In the full system, we find that uncertainties in the present positions, motions, and masses of all galaxies leave room for drastically different outcomes, and a probability of close to 50% that there is no Milky Way - Andromeda merger during the next 10 billion years.

arXiv.org
Black hole is soaring between galaxies, leaving stars in its wake

A galaxy merger may have set a supermassive black hole free.

Ars Technica
A dual quasar shines light on two supermassive black holes on a collision course inside a galaxy merger

Astronomers have made a rare discovery in the early universe involving two actively feeding supermassive black holes—or quasars—just 10,000 light-years apart from each other, that are on the verge of a colossal collision.

Phys.org

#Astronomer Halton Arp believed that the best way to understand the #physics of spiral #galaxies was to study deformed galaxies. He assembled 338 irregular, interacting, or otherwise interesting galaxies in his "Atlas of Peculiar Galaxies" in 1966. The original text may be found here: https://ned.ipac.caltech.edu/level5/Arp/Arp_contents.html

A newer, photographic version may be found here: https://shopatsky.com/products/arp-atlas-of-peculiar-galaxies

#astrodon #universe #astronomy #space #Astrophysics #astrophotography #science #galaxymerger #galaxy

ARP Atlas of Peculiar Galaxies

Scientists find pair of black holes dining together in nearby galaxy merger

While studying a nearby pair of merging galaxies using the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA)—an international observatory co-operated by the U.S. National Science Foundation's National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO)—scientists discovered two supermassive black holes growing simultaneously near the center of the newly coalescing galaxy.

Phys.org

#astronomy #galaxies #stars #GalaxyMerger

An image captured by the Hubble Space Telescope's ACS instrument shows Arp-Madore 417-391, or simply AM 417-391, a pair of merging galaxies. It's part of the Arp-Madore catalog, which collects particularly peculiar galaxies in the southern sky. It includes pairs of galaxies interacting at levels that go up to a merger just like AM 417-391.

https://english.tachyonbeam.com/2022/11/22/the-merging-galaxy-pair-arp-madore-417-391-generated-a-huge-cosmic-ring/