Thousands of galaxies crowd into this Herschel image of the distant  Universe. Each dot is an entire galaxy containing billions of stars. For  more than a decade, astronomers have puzzled over strangely bright  galaxies in the distant Universe. These ‘luminous infrared galaxies’  appear to be creating stars at such phenomenal rates that they defy  conventional theories of galaxy formation.
ESA’s Herschel  infrared space observatory, with its ability for very sensitive mapping  over wide areas, has seen thousands of these galaxies and pinpointed  their locations, showing for the first time that they are packing  themselves closely together, forming large clusters of galaxies by the  force of their mutual gravity.
Source: ESA - oshi
 
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