by Ann » Fri Feb 01, 2019 6:06 pm
starsurfer wrote: ↑Fri Feb 01, 2019 5:02 pm
rstevenson wrote: ↑Fri Feb 01, 2019 4:45 pm
Tara_Li wrote: ↑Fri Feb 01, 2019 3:12 pm
One of the things I love about the really large pictures APOD posts is that you can often find interesting things in the background. For example - at about pixel 75,750, there's a sharp point of light surrounded by lots of fuzziness. It doesn't exactly look like the normal elliptical/spherical galaxy, since the core brightness is too sharp, so I'm guessing it's *maybe* a comet? Or maybe it's just a chance alignment of a star and an elliptical galaxy - I dunno. Kinda neat, though.
I think this is the spot you're talking about. I screen captured this from a 500% blowup of the image, then increased the brightness and contrast to bring out a little more detail. Seems like it could be a distant elliptical galaxy.
detail.jpg
Rob
This is the low surface brightness dwarf galaxy PGC 42075. There seem to be a lot of these in Virgo. I guess this is what you get when all star formation ceases and all that is left are old stars.
Thanks for identifying it, starsurfer.
Rob, a distant (and therefore large and massive) elliptical galaxy wouldn't look like that. It wouldn't have such a bright concentrated center and such a diaphanous "body".
The picture at left shows galaxies just north of the twin galaxies in today's APOD. There are two massive elliptical galaxies there and a number of "anemic" spirals, which are losing their gas and their ability to form new stars.
As you can see, there is not a single galaxy here that looks like a bright point surrounded by a ghostly halo in remotely the same way as PGC 42075. Massive galaxies don't look like that, unless they are low surface brightness galaxies, like Malin 1.
Low Surface Brightness Galaxy Malin 1.
Photo: Gaspar Galaz et al., Megacam on the 6.5m Magellan/Clay telescope
No, I take that back. Even massive low-surface galaxies don't look like that.
Wikipedia wrote:
Malin 1 is a giant low surface brightness (LSB) spiral galaxy.[1][8] It is located 1.19 billion light-years (366 Mpc) away in the constellation Coma Berenices, near the North Galactic Pole. As of February 2015, it is arguably the largest known spiral galaxy, with an approximate diameter of 650,000 light-years (200,000 pc),[5][6][7] six and a half times the diameter of our Milky Way. It was discovered by astronomer David Malin in 1986 and is the first LSB galaxy verified to exist.[8][7][5] Its high surface brightness central spiral is 30,000 light-years (9,200 pc) across, with a bulge of 10,000 light-years (3,100 pc).[5] The central spiral is a SB0a type barred-spiral.
I guess PGC 42075 is a low surface brightness nucleated dwarf spheroidal galaxy after all.
Ann
Edit: Alcor just informed me that the NGC 3309/3311/3312 trio is nowhere near the overlapping twins in Virgo! Thanks, Alcor!
[quote=starsurfer post_id=289481 time=1549040555 user_id=137896]
[quote=rstevenson post_id=289478 time=1549039512 user_id=124801]
[quote=Tara_Li post_id=289465 time=1549033967 user_id=127323]
One of the things I love about the really large pictures APOD posts is that you can often find interesting things in the background. For example - at about pixel 75,750, there's a sharp point of light surrounded by lots of fuzziness. It doesn't exactly look like the normal elliptical/spherical galaxy, since the core brightness is too sharp, so I'm guessing it's *maybe* a comet? Or maybe it's just a chance alignment of a star and an elliptical galaxy - I dunno. Kinda neat, though.
[/quote]
I think this is the spot you're talking about. I screen captured this from a 500% blowup of the image, then increased the brightness and contrast to bring out a little more detail. Seems like it could be a distant elliptical galaxy.
detail.jpg
Rob
[/quote]
This is the low surface brightness dwarf galaxy PGC 42075. There seem to be a lot of these in Virgo. I guess this is what you get when all star formation ceases and all that is left are old stars.
[/quote]
Thanks for identifying it, starsurfer.
[float=left][img2]https://cgs.obs.carnegiescience.edu/CGS/data/images/NGC3309_NGC3311_NGC3312_color.jpg[/img2][c][size=85]NGC 3309, 3311, 3312. Source:
https://cgs.obs.carnegiescience.edu/CGS/object_html_pages/NGC3309.html[/size][/c][/float]
Rob, a distant (and therefore large and massive) elliptical galaxy wouldn't look like that. It wouldn't have such a bright concentrated center and such a diaphanous "body".
[s]The picture at left shows galaxies just north of the twin galaxies in today's APOD.[/s] There are two massive elliptical galaxies there and a number of "anemic" spirals, which are losing their gas and their ability to form new stars.
As you can see, there is not a single galaxy here that looks like a bright point surrounded by a ghostly halo in remotely the same way as PGC 42075. Massive galaxies don't look like that, unless they are low surface brightness galaxies, like Malin 1.
[float=right][img2]http://www.astrophoto.cl/images/gallery/collaborations/malin1_small.jpg[/img2][c][size=85]Low Surface Brightness Galaxy Malin 1.
Photo: Gaspar Galaz et al., Megacam on the 6.5m Magellan/Clay telescope[/size][/c][/float]
No, I take that back. Even massive low-surface galaxies don't look like that.
[quote][url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malin_1]Wikipedia[/url] wrote:
Malin 1 is a giant low surface brightness (LSB) spiral galaxy.[1][8] It is located 1.19 billion light-years (366 Mpc) away in the constellation Coma Berenices, near the North Galactic Pole. As of February 2015, it is arguably the largest known spiral galaxy, with an approximate diameter of 650,000 light-years (200,000 pc),[5][6][7] six and a half times the diameter of our Milky Way. It was discovered by astronomer David Malin in 1986 and is the first LSB galaxy verified to exist.[8][7][5] Its high surface brightness central spiral is 30,000 light-years (9,200 pc) across, with a bulge of 10,000 light-years (3,100 pc).[5] The central spiral is a SB0a type barred-spiral.[/quote]
I guess PGC 42075 is a low surface brightness nucleated dwarf spheroidal galaxy after all.
Ann
Edit: Alcor just informed me that the NGC 3309/3311/3312 trio is nowhere near the overlapping twins in Virgo! Thanks, Alcor!