
The topic of NASA’s ESA Space Telescope is the amazing Galaxy NGC 5530. This galaxy is 40 million light years away in a lupus constellation, a wolf, and is classified as a “vortex”, which means that its spiral arms are not respected.
While some galaxies have unusually bright centers that host a super black hole, the bright source near the NGC 5530 center is not an active black hole but a star inside our galaxy, only 10,000 light years of Earth. The alignment of this appearance gives the star to the heart of the thick NGC 5530.
If you play a telescope in the backyard of NGC 5530 pm on September 13, 2007, I would have seen another bright point of light adorning the galaxy. That night, Australian amateur astronomer Robert Evans, called SN 2007it, discovered by comparing the appearance of NGC 5530 via telescope into a reference image of the galaxy. Although it is great to discover even one Supernova using this strenuous method, Evans actually discovered more than 40 Supernovae aircraft in this way! This particular discovery was really chest: the light from Supernova was likely to have completed his 40 million years to Earth just a few days before Ivans discovered the explosion.