The peculiar compact Blue Dwarf Galaxy

NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope recently captured a rather impressive image of the irregular NGC 5253 galaxy.

NGC 5253 is one of the nearest of the known Blue Compact Dwarf (BCD) galaxies, as it is located at a distance of approximately 12 million light-years from Earth in the southern constellation of Centaurus.

The most characteristic signature of such galaxies is inclusion of very active star-formation regions. This is in spite of their low dust content and comparative lack of elements heavier than hydrogen and helium, which are typically the basic ingredients for star formation.

These galaxies contain molecular clouds that are quite similar to the pristine clouds that formed the first stars in the early Universe, which were devoid of dust and heavier elements. Hence, astronomers consider the BCD galaxies to be an ideal test bed for better understanding the primordial star-forming process.

NGC 5253 does contain some dust and heavier elements, but significantly less than the Milky Way galaxy. Its central regions are dominated by an intense star forming region that is embedded in an elliptical main body, which appears red in Hubble’s image.

The central starburst zone consists of a rich environment of hot, young stars concentrated in star clusters, which glow in blue in the image. Traces of the starburst itself can be seen as a faint and diffuse glow produced by the ionized oxygen gas.

The true nature of BCD galaxies has puzzled astronomers for a long time. Numerical simulations following the current leading cosmological theory of galaxy formation, known as the Lambda Cold Dark Matter model, predict that there should be far more satellite dwarf galaxies orbiting big galaxies like the Milky Way. Astronomers refer to this discrepancy as the Dwarf Galaxy Problem.

This galaxy is considered part of the Centaurus A/Messier 83 group of galaxies, which includes the famous radio galaxy Centaurus A and the spiral galaxy Messier 83. Astronomers have also hypothesized that the peculiar nature of NGC 5253 could result from a close encounter with Messier 83, its closer neighbor.