by Ann » Sun Jun 24, 2018 7:00 am
I have to add (since it is too late for me to edit my post) that the unusually blue color of the disk of NGC 3486 is real. James D Wray pointed out, in his eminent
The Color Atlas of Galaxies, that the disk and arms of NGC 3486 seems to lack the intermediate population of stars that is so typical of other spiral galaxies. See, for example,
this SDSS picture of M51 and NGC 5195, which clearly shows the intermediate to old yellowish stellar populations in the inter-arm regions of M51.
James D Wray said about NGC 3486 that it seems to lack an intermediate population, which suggests that its disk and arms are "all young". That can't be true, of course, but the intermediate stellar component of NGC 3486 is really strikingly weak.
What James D Wray showed in his atlas is that the entire disk of NGC 3486 is quite faint, and that most of the light from this galaxy really comes from its small central region.
Ann
I have to add (since it is too late for me to edit my post) that the unusually blue color of the disk of NGC 3486 is real. James D Wray pointed out, in his eminent [i]The Color Atlas of Galaxies[/i], that the disk and arms of NGC 3486 seems to lack the intermediate population of stars that is so typical of other spiral galaxies. See, for example, [url=http://classic.sdss.org/includes/sideimages/m51.jpg]this SDSS picture of M51[/url] and NGC 5195, which clearly shows the intermediate to old yellowish stellar populations in the inter-arm regions of M51.
James D Wray said about NGC 3486 that it seems to lack an intermediate population, which suggests that its disk and arms are "all young". That can't be true, of course, but the intermediate stellar component of NGC 3486 is really strikingly weak.
What James D Wray showed in his atlas is that the entire disk of NGC 3486 is quite faint, and that most of the light from this galaxy really comes from its small central region.
Ann