by Ann » Thu Mar 27, 2014 1:15 pm
Boomer12k wrote:If 7320 is not apart of the group....then why does it look distorted too? Appears to have a star trail to our left view...
Really great shot!!!
:---[===] *
Good call, Boomer. Yes, NGC 7320 really
is distorted - or rather, it really does have a tidal tail. By an amazing coincidence,
the tidal tail of NGC 7320 exactly mirrors the shape, the orientation and the apparent length of the tidal tail emanating from NGC 7319.
But wait! Is that really a coincidence? Isn't this the final proof that NGC 7320 is really a physical member of Stephan's Quintet?
No, a scrutiny of the stellar populations of the different galaxies definitely proves that NGC 7320 is a foreground object. The disk of NGC 7320 is very grainy in today's APOD, as if it was sprinkled with blue grains of sand. It seems almost certain that many individual stars are resolved here. The blue parts of the other galaxies are not nearly as grainy. Some of their "blue regions" are completely smooth, meaning that nothing is resolved there. Other parts are grainier, but we are almost certainly looking at clusters there and not individual stars.
But the real clincher is the appearance of the bulges of the galaxies. NGC 7320 has a faint, not really yellow bulge and a tiny, faint nucleus. The other galaxies have brilliantly bright, yellow bulges. Clearly their bulges are very rich in stars, whereas the bulge of NGC 7320 is faint precisely because it is star-poor. But if NGC 7320 was at the same distance from us as the rest of Stephan's Quintet, then the stars of its disk and bulge would be much more "spread out" than the stars of the disks and bulges of the other galaxies. NGC 7320 would simply be much "fluffier" than the other galaxies. It is unthinkable that a "fluffy" galaxy would be unaffected by the titanic collision and extreme tidal forces ripping through the rest of the group.
But if NGC 7320 is a foreground object, then its faint bulge and tiny nucleus is just normal for a galaxy of its class, a quite small galaxy.
Ann
[quote="Boomer12k"]If 7320 is not apart of the group....then why does it look distorted too? Appears to have a star trail to our left view...
Really great shot!!!
:---[===] *[/quote]
Good call, Boomer. Yes, NGC 7320 really [i]is[/i] distorted - or rather, it really does have a tidal tail. By an amazing coincidence, [url=http://planewave.com/wp-content/uploads/files/images/61.jpg]the tidal tail of NGC 7320 exactly mirrors the shape, the orientation and the apparent length of the tidal tail emanating from NGC 7319[/url].
But wait! Is that really a coincidence? Isn't this the final proof that NGC 7320 is really a physical member of Stephan's Quintet?
No, a scrutiny of the stellar populations of the different galaxies definitely proves that NGC 7320 is a foreground object. The disk of NGC 7320 is very grainy in today's APOD, as if it was sprinkled with blue grains of sand. It seems almost certain that many individual stars are resolved here. The blue parts of the other galaxies are not nearly as grainy. Some of their "blue regions" are completely smooth, meaning that nothing is resolved there. Other parts are grainier, but we are almost certainly looking at clusters there and not individual stars.
But the real clincher is the appearance of the bulges of the galaxies. NGC 7320 has a faint, not really yellow bulge and a tiny, faint nucleus. The other galaxies have brilliantly bright, yellow bulges. Clearly their bulges are very rich in stars, whereas the bulge of NGC 7320 is faint precisely because it is star-poor. But if NGC 7320 was at the same distance from us as the rest of Stephan's Quintet, then the stars of its disk and bulge would be much more "spread out" than the stars of the disks and bulges of the other galaxies. NGC 7320 would simply be much "fluffier" than the other galaxies. It is unthinkable that a "fluffy" galaxy would be unaffected by the titanic collision and extreme tidal forces ripping through the rest of the group.
But if NGC 7320 is a foreground object, then its faint bulge and tiny nucleus is just normal for a galaxy of its class, a quite small galaxy.
Ann