Revisiting an unusual spiral
What lies at the heart of this unusual-looking spiral galaxy? The galaxy NGC 4102, featured in this ESA/Hubble Picture of the Week, is home to what astronomers call an active galactic nucleus. Active galactic nuclei are luminous galactic centres powered by supermassive black holes that contain millions to billion times the mass of our Sun. As these black holes ensnare gas from their surroundings and draw it close with their intense gravitational pull, the gas becomes so hot that it begins to glow and emits light from X-ray to radio wavelengths.
At a distance of just 56 million light-years away in the constellation Ursa Major (The Great Bear), NGC 4102 provides an ideal opportunity to study the ways in which active galactic nuclei interact with their home galaxies. Active galactic nuclei come in many different flavours, from extremely powerful types that consume massive amounts of matter and shoot out jets of charged particles, to calmer types that sip gas from their surroundings and glow more faintly.
NGC 4102 likely falls into the latter category. It’s classified as Compton-thick — a way of saying that its nucleus is obscured by a thick layer of gas — and a LINER, or low-ionisation nuclear emission-line region. LINER galaxies are identified by emission lines from certain weakly ionised elements, and they can be powered by a supermassive black hole that is lazily collecting gas from around it.
A previous image of this galaxy, made from data taken with Hubble’s Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2), was released in 2014. This new version presents an upgraded view of the galaxy, using data from the Wide Field Camera 3, which replaced WFPC2 in 2009 and improved upon its resolution and field of view. The new observations come from a programme that will combine visible-light images from Hubble with X-ray information from the Chandra X-ray Observatory to study the relationship between NGC 4102 and its active galactic nucleus.
[Image Description: A spiral galaxy. The inner region immediately around the bright centre is golden in colour. A gap separates this region from a bright ring, itself surrounded by a glowing halo. Strands of dark brown dust swirl around the centre and the outer ring, joined in one spot by a curved arm. Bright, blue and pink specks of light dot the ring, showing where stars are concentrated or have recently formed.]
Credit:ESA/Hubble & NASA, G. Fabbiano
About the Image
| Id: | potw2544a | 
|---|---|
| Type: | Observation | 
| Release date: | 3 November 2025, 06:00 | 
| Size: | 3994 x 3403 px | 
About the Object
| Name: | NGC 4102 | 
|---|---|
| Distance: | 56 million light years | 
| Constellation: | Ursa Major | 
| Category: | Galaxies | 
Coordinates
| Position (RA): | 12 6 23.08 | 
|---|---|
| Position (Dec): | 52° 42' 41.32" | 
| Field of view: | 2.64 x 2.25 arcminutes | 
| Orientation: | North is 15.5° left of vertical | 
Colours & filters
| Band | Wavelength | Telescope | 
|---|---|---|
| Optical Hβ  | 487 nm | 
                
                    
                        Hubble Space Telescope
                    
                    
                         WFC3  | 
| Optical Strömgren y  | 547 nm | 
                
                    
                        Hubble Space Telescope
                    
                    
                         WFC3  | 
| Optical I  | 814 nm | 
                
                    
                        Hubble Space Telescope
                    
                    
                         WFC3  | 
| Optical S II  | 673 nm | 
                
                    
                        Hubble Space Telescope
                    
                    
                         WFC3  | 

