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The Hubble Space Telescope captured a distant galaxy called IC 1776, whose faint spiral arms are difficult to distinguish amid a pale yellow glow emanating from its core. The galaxy recently hosted the supernova SN 2015ap (Image credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA, A. Filippenko)

 

A distant galaxy looms in lonely isolation in a new photo from the Hubble Space Telescope.

 

The galaxy, called IC 1776, lies over 150 million light-years from Earth in the constellation Pisces. Hubble, a joint mission led by NASA and the European Space Agency (ESA), snapped this new view of the galaxy, capturing its irregularly-shaped structure and indistinct spiral arms.

 

"The edges are faint and the core has a pale yellow glow. It is dotted with small, wispy, blue regions where stars are forming," ESA officials said in a statement. "A few stars and small galaxies in warm colors are visible around it."

 

Observations of IC 1776 suggest the galaxy recently hosted a violent star explosion, also known as a supernova. Data from the Lick Observatory Supernova Search — a robotic telescope that scours the night sky in search of transient phenomena such as supernovas — revealed remnants of the stellar explosion, named SN 2015ap, with observations collected in 2015.

 

Hubble then followed up with observations of the supernova’s aftermath as part of two different projects, both of which were designed to investigate the debris left behind by such stellar explosions. The ESA shared Hubble’s latest view of IC 1776, in which the supernova SN 2015ap occurred,  on Sept. 4.

 

"A variety of telescopes automatically follow up the detection of supernova to obtain early measurements of these event brightnesses and spectra," ESA officials said in the statement. "Complementing these measurements with later observations which reveal the lingering energy of supernova can shed light on the systems which gave rise to these cosmic cataclysms in the first place." 

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