Pandora's Galaxy Cluster
Abell 2744

Product Description
Why is this cluster of galaxies so jumbled?
Far from a smooth distribution,
Abell
2744 not only has knots of
galaxies, but the
X-ray
emitting hot gas (colored red) in the cluster appears distributed
differently than the
dark
matter.
The dark matter, taking up over 75 percent of the
cluster
mass and colored blue in the
above
image, was inferred by that
needed to create the distortion of background galaxies by
gravitational
lensing.
The
jumble
appears to result from the
slow
motion collision of at least
four smaller galaxy clusters over the past few billion years.
The above
picture
combines optical images from the
Hubble
Space Telescope and the
Very
Large Telescope
with X-ray images from the
Chandra
X-Ray Observatory.
Abell
2744, dubbed
Pandora's
cluster, spans over two million light years and can best be seen with a
really large telescope toward the constellation of the
Sculptor.
Image
Credit: NASA,
ESA,
J. Merten (
ITA,
AOB),
& D. Coe (
STScI)
Text:
APOD