Hubble Space Telescope captures image of M63

The Hubble Space Telescope captured an amazing image of M63, also known as the Sunflower Galaxy. Thus, Andromeda Galaxy isn’t the only one out there. In 1779, French astronomer Pierre Mechain first discovered M63. Mechain’s discovery has been etched in history as the 63rd entry into Charles Messier’s famous catalog.

The Messier catalog was made up of over 100 deep space objects, including diffuse nebulae, planetary nebulae, open clusters, globular clusters and galaxies.

As per NASA, M63 is present around 27 million light years away. The galaxy belongs to a larger group of galaxies called the M51 Group. It has been given name after its brightest galaxy, Messier 51 – also known as the Whirlpool Galaxy.

M63 can be called a flocculent galaxy its arms are patchy like tufts of cotton. Nearly, a third of all spirals are flocculent, and it seems that nobody so far has been able to understand what causes it.

One idea is that local gas clouds get stretched and sheared due to the galaxy’s differential rotation. This mean, stuff nearer to the center makes an orbit around the galactic center in less time as compared to stuff farther out.

The other idea is that formation of the star is localized, beginning randomly in spots in the disk of the galaxy, triggering more star formation around it leading to that patchwork. In galaxies such as the Milky Way, the spiral arms trigger star formation by themselves due to which more of a sweeping, grand design to the spiral arms is seen.