May 10, 1999
			
		
		
		
			NGC 4650A appears to be two galaxies in one.  
A rare type of galaxy known as a 
Polar Ring, 
NGC 4650A is composed of an 
old central group of stars and a 
young ring of stars rotating farther out.  
Both components are clearly visible in this 
featured photograph by the 
Hubble Space Telescope.  
What creates 
Polar Ring Galaxies is still being researched, 
but a leading theory is the 
collision 
of two distinct galaxies in the distant past.  
Polar Ring Galaxies 
allow astronomers to estimate the amount of 
dark matter in galaxies by measuring the 
rotation rate of the highly extended ring.  
An unknown type of 
dark matter is implied because the 
ring typically 
rotates too fast to be held together by 
only the visible stars.
 
		
		
