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NGC 1569: Starburst in a Small Galaxy
Credit: ESA, NASA, P. Anders (Göttingen Univ.) et al.
Explanation: Grand spiral galaxies often seem to get all the glory, flaunting their young,
bright, blue star clusters in beautiful, symmetric spiral arms. But small, irregular
galaxies form stars too. In fact, as pictured here, dwarf galaxy NGC 1569 is apparently
undergoing a burst of star forming activity, thought to have begun over 25 million years
ago. The resulting turbulent environment is fed by supernova explosions as the cosmic
detonations spew out material and trigger further star formation. Two massive star
clusters - youthful counterparts to globular star clusters in our own spiral Milky Way
galaxy - are seen left of center in the gorgeous Hubble Space Telescope image. The picture
spans about 1,500 light-years across NGC 1569. A mere 7 million light-years distant, this
relatively close starburst galaxy offers astronomers an excellent opportunity to study
stellar populations in rapidly evolving galaxies. NGC 1569 lies in the long-necked
constellation Camelopardalis.

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