One of the last entries in Charles Messier’s catalog, the Pinwheel Galaxy (M101) stands as its most dazzling wonder. Spanning 170,000 light-years—nearly twice the Milky Way’s size—it first revealed its spiral secrets to 19th-century astronomer Lord Rosse through the Parsonstown Leviathan, the era’s largest telescope.
Hubble Space Telescope has now crafted a transcendent portrait, merging 51 space-based observations with ground-based data. The resulting image captures M101’s 40,000-light-year core in unprecedented detail, showcasing face-on spiral arms laced with interstellar dust. Stunningly, the telescope peers through the galaxy’s disk to reveal distant galaxies beyond, a testament to its resolving power.
Suspended 25 million light-years away in Ursa Major, M101’s "cosmic windmill" structure has become a symbol of human curiosity. Its starlight weaves a narrative from 19th-century observatories to 21st-century space telescopes, proving that two centuries of technological leaps only deepen our awe of the universe’s grand design.