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Credit & Copyright: Andrew Cooper (MPA),   
Carlos Frenk, John Helly, Shaun Cole   
(Institute for   
Computational Cosmology),    
David Martinez-Delgado (MPIA), Star Stream Pilot Survey Group
Explanation:
Similar in size to the Milky Way,   
elliptical galaxy NGC 7600 is about 150 thousand light-years distant.   
   
In   
this deep image, spanning about 1/2 degree on   
the sky   
toward the constellation Aquarius, NGC 7600 sports a remarkable   
outer halo of nested shells and broad circumgalactic structures.   
   
The tantalizing features can be explained by   
the accretion of   
dark matter and stars on   
a cosmic timescale.   
   
In fact, a movie generated by simulating galaxy formation using a   
cosmological model with   
cold   
dark matter for the halos of merging galaxies   
reproduces the appearance of NGC 7600 in amazing detail.   
   
The remarkable simulation movie is   
available here on Vimeo and   
here in other   
formats.   
   
It presents compelling evidence that detailed features of   
galaxy mergers observed with small, wide   
field telescopes on planet Earth, are natural consequences of   
galaxy formation and fundamental   
properties of dark matter.   
   
David Martinez-Delgado (MPIA), Star Stream Pilot Survey Group
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Based on Astronomy Picture
Of the Day
Publications with keywords: Elliptical Galaxy - dark matter - merging galaxies
Publications with words: Elliptical Galaxy - dark matter - merging galaxies
See also:
