After a blue dwarf galaxy shot through it like an arrow, the large Bullseye now has nine rings—six more than any other galaxy ...
The eight ripples seen by the Hubble Space Telescope in this cosmic scene marks the most ever seen in any galaxy, and data ...
A new image from NASA's Hubble space telescope shows what's nicknamed The Bullseye. It’s real name is Gargantuan Galaxy Leda 1313424. It has star-filled rings from a blue dwarf galaxy that went ...
A blue dwarf galaxy pitched through the bullseye's galactic neighborhood 50 million years ago, leaving behind nine glittering rings.
(CNN) – A new image from NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope shows what is nicknamed “The Bullseye.” Its real name is Gargantuan Galaxy Leda 1313424. The galaxy has star-filled rings from a blue ...
The blue dwarf galaxy wasn’t obliterated in the process though—in fact, it’s the blob visible directly to the Bullseye’s left in the above image. It’s also a strange twist on the ...
That blue dwarf galaxy is still in the bullseye's vicinity—in fact, it's attached to the bullseye by a thin thread of gas roughly 130,000 light-years long. In the image at the top of this page ...