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This is a beautiful 11"x14" photograph printed on Fuji Crystal Archive paper in our professional photo lab. The image size is 12" x 10" and printed on 14" x 11" paper. Additionally, print sizes from 8" x 10" to 40" x60" and larger are also available - email HubblePix@gmail.com for pricing.
This is a unique NASA Hubble Space Telescope view of the Disk Galaxy NGC 5866 tilted nearly edge-on to our line-of-sight.
Hubble's sharp vision reveals a crisp dust lane dividing the galaxy into two halves. The image highlights the galaxy's structure: a subtle, reddish bulge surrounding a bright nucleus, a blue disk of stars running parallel to the dust lane, and a transparent outer halo.
Some faint, wispy trails of dust can be seen meandering away from the disk of the galaxy out into the bulge and inner halo of the galaxy. The outer halo is dotted with numerous gravitationally bound clusters of nearly a million stars each, known as globular clusters. Background galaxies that are millions to billions of light-years farther away than NGC 5866 are also seen through the halo.
NGC 5866 is a disk galaxy of type "S0" (pronounced s-zero). Viewed face on, it would look like a smooth, flat disk with little spiral structure. It remains in the spiral category because of the flatness of the main disk of stars as opposed to the more spherically rotund (or ellipsoidal) class of galaxies called "ellipticals." Such S0 galaxies, with disks like spirals and large bulges like ellipticals, are called 'lenticular' galaxies.
Object Name: NGC 5866
Image Type: Astronomical
Credit: NASA, ESA, and The Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA)
Acknowledgment: W. Keel (University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa)
(HST-ADC)

