Hubble Space Telescope Calls Out “Hot Mess” Galactic Collision

NASA is throwing shade at some colliding galaxies as they merge into what is known as an acting galaxies.

The Hubble Space Telescope referred to the galaxy as a hot mess, which is located a cool 550 million lightyears away from Earth.

The account said that eventually, the merging of the two galaxies will result in an elliptical shape that can be seen in the southern sky.

Want to Smash.

It sounds dramatic, but it's actually pretty common. According to Harvard's Center for Astrophysics, researchers have discovered that as many as 25 percent of the universe are merging.

It turns out that galactic collisions are important too. Astronomers at the Rochester Institute of Technology theorize that the universe was created when the universe was hit by the universe's first star. The RIT researchers argued that this collision could explain the ripples found on the outer rim of the Milky Way.

There are a lot of imaginative directions we could take with the hot mess that is the ESO 239-2 galaxy. Is it home to new particles, or a vast expanse of unknown?

Astronomers say something is warping our entire galaxy.

The Hubble took a picture of the "Furnace" galaxy.

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