by Ann » Fri Apr 21, 2017 5:54 pm
Chris Peterson wrote:sytheblackwolfe wrote:The caption for the picture says that NGC 4298 is a "smaller companion" of NGC 4302, which I would assume means it lies at roughly the same distance of 55 million light-years. But if that's so, I'd expect to see a lot more interaction than just some tidal stretching of NGC 4298. Is it possible the distance estimate is incorrect for NGC 4298?
I would not assume "smaller" means physically smaller, but rather, apparently smaller.
Large astronomical distances are difficult to determine. The distance to these objects is only known to about a 20% error range. Either one could be one or two million light years farther away than the other and we'd have no clear way of telling that. In other words, they could easily be as far apart as the Milky Way and Andromeda, which have very little tidal interaction.
I would, in fact, guess that NGC 4302 is indeed physically bigger than NGC 4298. Even though these galaxies might well be separated by 2 million light years or so, at a distance of ~55 million light-years that wouldn't affect the apparent size of them all that much. Indeed, such a separation could enhance the apparent difference in size, but I don't think it could create it from scratch if these two galaxies were indeed the same size. NGC 4302 does appear to have a more extensive disk. Also NGC 4302 appears yellower than NGC 4298. Yes, edge-on galaxies typically appear yellower than face-on ones, because the dust lane itself imparts reddening, but in the case of NGC 4302 it definitely has a yellow inner disk. Larger galaxies are expected to have produced a larger yellow population than smaller galaxies.
So I would think that NGC 4302 is bigger than NGC 4298, but I also think that these galaxies are separated by a sufficiently large distance that they don't cause much tidal stretching of each other's disks.
Ann
[quote="Chris Peterson"][quote="sytheblackwolfe"]The caption for the picture says that NGC 4298 is a "smaller companion" of NGC 4302, which I would assume means it lies at roughly the same distance of 55 million light-years. But if that's so, I'd expect to see a lot more interaction than just some tidal stretching of NGC 4298. Is it possible the distance estimate is incorrect for NGC 4298?[/quote]
I would not assume "smaller" means physically smaller, but rather, apparently smaller.
Large astronomical distances are difficult to determine. The distance to these objects is only known to about a 20% error range. Either one could be one or two million light years farther away than the other and we'd have no clear way of telling that. In other words, they could easily be as far apart as the Milky Way and Andromeda, which have very little tidal interaction.[/quote]
I would, in fact, guess that NGC 4302 is indeed physically bigger than NGC 4298. Even though these galaxies might well be separated by 2 million light years or so, at a distance of ~55 million light-years that wouldn't affect the apparent size of them all that much. Indeed, such a separation could enhance the apparent difference in size, but I don't think it could create it from scratch if these two galaxies were indeed the same size. NGC 4302 does appear to have a more extensive disk. Also NGC 4302 appears yellower than NGC 4298. Yes, edge-on galaxies typically appear yellower than face-on ones, because the dust lane itself imparts reddening, but in the case of NGC 4302 it definitely has a yellow inner disk. Larger galaxies are expected to have produced a larger yellow population than smaller galaxies.
So I would think that NGC 4302 is bigger than NGC 4298, but I also think that these galaxies are separated by a sufficiently large distance that they don't cause much tidal stretching of each other's disks.
Ann