by neufer » Fri Sep 11, 2009 8:18 pm
Sarba Guha wrote:The "Blue Galaxy" is merely 40-million light years away while the others are 300-million light years away. The difference in distance is by a factor of 7.5 - right?
YET, the Blue Galaxy doesn't appear more than 2 to 3 times larger than any of the others.
Does that mean that those galaxies are twice, or even more than thrice as large, as the Blue Galaxy?
To be fair the Blue Galaxy (NGC 7320) is more like 4 times larger in apparent diameter
than any of the
undisturbed parts of the other Stephan's Quintet galaxies.
And the Blue Galaxy (NGC 7320) is more like 5 or 6 times larger in apparent diameter than the
undisturbed fifth member
of the
TRUE QUINTET (a.k.a., the Hickson Compact Group 92) as seen here in the far upper left:
If the Blue Galaxy (NGC 7320) is, indeed, 40-million light years away then, certainly, it is a somewhat small galaxy (~25-thousand light years in diameter or about half the size of
M33)...especially when one compares it to its
real nearby neighbor
NGC 7331 which is ~150-thousand light years in diameter.
Such large disparities in galactic size are seen in other
Hickson Compact Groups:
[quote="Sarba Guha"]The "Blue Galaxy" is merely 40-million light years away while the others are 300-million light years away. The difference in distance is by a factor of 7.5 - right?
YET, the Blue Galaxy doesn't appear more than 2 to 3 times larger than any of the others.
Does that mean that those galaxies are twice, or even more than thrice as large, as the Blue Galaxy?[/quote]
To be fair the Blue Galaxy (NGC 7320) is more like 4 times larger in apparent diameter
than any of the [u][b]undisturbed parts[/b][/u] of the other Stephan's Quintet galaxies.
And the Blue Galaxy (NGC 7320) is more like 5 or 6 times larger in apparent diameter than the [u][b]undisturbed[/b][/u] fifth member
of the [color=#FF8000][u][b]TRUE QUINTET[/b][/u] (a.k.a., the [b]Hickson Compact Group[/b] 92)[/color] as seen here in the far upper left:
[img2]http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/31/StephansQuintettIlustrated2.gif/500px-StephansQuintettIlustrated2.gif[/img2]
If the Blue Galaxy (NGC 7320) is, indeed, 40-million light years away then, certainly, it is a somewhat small galaxy (~25-thousand light years in diameter or about half the size of [url=http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap080913.html][b]M33[/b][/url])...especially when one compares it to its [u][b]real[/b][/u] nearby neighbor [url=http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap090806.html][b]NGC 7331[/b][/url] which is ~150-thousand light years in diameter.
Such large disparities in galactic size are seen in other [b]Hickson Compact Groups:[/b]
[img2]http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/3b/Galaxy.group.hickson.arp.500pix.jpg[/img2]