The Leo Triplet, considered a separate entity within the broader M66 group, is located in the northern constellation Leo. Rather than cleanly merging into one giant supergalaxy, these galaxies are caught in a violent, messy gravitational interaction. The group consists of Messier 65 (NGC 3623), Messier 66 (NGC 3627), and NGC 3628. While NGC 3627 and NGC 3628 are known to severely distort one another, the exact relationship of NGC 3623 to the other two remains something of an astronomical mystery. Together, they form one turbulent ‘Cosmic Three-Way Dance.’
Galaxy groups can be viewed as a small neighborhood; astronomers classify them as ‘loose groups. ‘ Because these galaxies are in such close quarters, their gravitational forces violently interact, but rather than trapping gas inside, these encounters can actually rip massive amounts of material out into the intergalactic space between them. For instance, the Leo Triplet features a massive plume of neutral hydrogen gas extending roughly 100 kiloparsecs from NGC 3628. In a fascinating twist of cosmic recycling, this ejected debris can sometimes condense to form entirely new, independent systems known as Tidal Dwarf Galaxies. On the other hand, galaxy clusters are your nearby metropolis. Clusters like Virgo are significantly larger and more densely populated, containing thousands of galaxies moving at high speeds. As they move fast, the galaxies rarely stick together when they collide.
The Leo Triplet lies at an estimated distance of roughly 40 million light-years from Earth. Through the lens of neutral hydrogen (HI) mapping and radio observations, it has been discovered that this is not just a collection of isolated galaxies, but a dynamic, heavily interacting system. Here, massive gravitational tidal forces act as invisible hands, causing galaxies to ‘bleed’ gas out into intergalactic space. Inside this scattered debris, stars are born in the void, pooling together to form entirely new dwarf galaxies. In visible light, the Leo Triplet looks like it is divided into separate, lonely islands, but when you look at the ‘Neutral Hydrogen Distribution,’ we can finally visualize the violent, interconnected web.
The first member, NGC 3623, often feels like the calm observer in a family of cosmic troublemakers. While its neighbors show dramatic scars and stretched-out gas tails, this galaxy keeps a neat, almost elegant shape. Classified as an Sa spiral, it looks tighter and smoother, as if it somehow managed to stay just outside the main gravitational scuffle. But don’t let that peaceful appearance fool you: beneath its quiet exterior lies a severe shortage of ‘cold gas,’ the very fuel needed to forge new stars. When astronomers search for the molecular gas that acts as stellar ‘ingredients,’ NGC 3623 comes up almost entirely empty. With its pantry practically bare compared to the billions of solar masses of gas in its chaotic siblings, it stands as a striking counterpoint—and a reminder that even galaxies in the same group grow up with very different personalities.
Messier 66 sits not too far away in sight, and while it doesn’t have quite the huge tail of its neighbor, it shows clear marks of a dynamic past. It features dramatic, hook-like arms twisted out of shape by the gravity of its neighbors. This galaxy is famous for its high activity; it has been the site of multiple spectacular supernova explosions, which are the bright deaths of massive stars. Interestingly, when astronomers look at its fuel reserves, M66 is an oddity: it has a highly unusual ratio of molecular gas to atomic gas. The same gravitational close shave that stretched NGC 3628’s gas likely forced M66 to rapidly convert its atomic hydrogen into dense molecular clouds. This turbulent dance not only warped its HI gas—stretching a patchy bridge of material across the gap between the two disks—but it also triggered a massive, historical burst of star formation that stirred up activity within M66’s spiral structure.
Finally, NGC 3628 is perhaps the most famous member, often called the Hamburger Galaxy because it is seen edge-on with a thick stripe of dark dust. It was the most severely ‘wounded’ during the collision, resulting in a ghostly plume of gas stretching hundreds of thousands of light-years into space. The Leo Triplet proves that galactic collisions are not just about destruction but also about creation. A breakthrough by Nikiel-Wroczyński et al. was the discovery of a self-gravitating dwarf galaxy of tidal origin at the extreme tip of NGC 3628’s gaseous tail. This Tidal Dwarf Galaxy (TDG), unlike most galaxies, is made almost entirely of visible ‘recycled’ gas ripped from the parent galaxy. Rather than stealing existing stars from its parent, it used this torn gas to forge its own new stars shortly after the collision. One could say that it is a ‘baby’ galaxy being born out of the wreckage, and because it severely lacks Dark Matter, it can be used as a rare laboratory for testing how gravity works without the cosmos’s usual ‘invisible help.’
When you step back and look at the Leo Triplet as a whole, what emerges isn’t just a pretty set of fuzzy spirals on a star chart, but a living astrophysical laboratory. By observing these three distinct galaxies—the quiet one, the active one, and the one with the spectacular tail—scientists can piece together the history of their movements and map their cosmic trajectory. The group demonstrates that galaxies are part of an interconnected web where a single encounter can change everything. These discoveries remind us that galaxies are not static islands in space but active participants in a grand gravitational choreography, sometimes ripping each other apart and occasionally creating something brand new out of the debris.
Written by Farhana Ferdous using https://notebooklm.google.com/notebook/94c71029-26a3-42e3-ac60-64f52bd328df and the papers therein.
Astrophotography information
| Astrophotography | Sohanur Rahman |
| Observing location | Pabna (24.00 North 89.23 East) |
| Exposure time |
8 minutes
|
| Telescope | Unistellar eQuinox 1 (Ashwin 2) |
| Camera | Sony IMX224, 1.27 Mpx |
| Field of view (resolution) | 0.61° × 0.46° (1.72 arcsec) |
| Image processing | – |
| Image processing method | – |
Astrophysical information
| Object type | Planetary Nebula |
| Constellation | Ophiuchus |
| Distance | 6 kly |
| Angular size | 13 arcseconds |
| Physical size | 0.05 ly |
| Apparent magnitude | 8.1 |



Jahirul Islam