by Ann » Wed Jun 14, 2023 3:22 pm
Guest wrote: ↑Wed Jun 14, 2023 12:53 pm
Who is the goofball that named this the shark nebula?
One person's goofball, another person's genius.
Anyway. There is a nice galaxy in the APOD, UGC 11861:
I liked the galaxy so much that I started looking for other pictures of it, but to my surprise, very few other images exist! One picture of UGC 11861 has been taken by dcrowson, and
published in Astronomy Magazine. But how different it looks!!!
UGC 11861 and bright star 16 Cep.
Credit: dcrowson.
dcrowson wrote:
UGC 11861 (PGC 67671 and others) is a low surface brightness galaxy located approximately 58 million light-years away in Cepheus.
A low surface brightness galaxy, yes, I'd say! Today's APOD shows that UGC 11861 is a nice spiral galaxy that contains star formation, but judging from dcrowson's image, its overall color seems to be light brown from cosmic dust! The stars don't seem to add very much color to this galaxy, because there are relatively few of them.
Here is a picture of the Shark Nebula and UGC 11861 by Jim Thommes:
So we have a foreground gas cloud that glows softly blue in places because it contains dust, which reflects the blue color primarily of stars hotter than the Sun. And then there is a background "gas and dark matter structure" that is light brown from dust!
Well, if the old woman can only reach seventeen times as high as the Moon, then the nebulas of the sky should be safe from her broom! Even though they are dusty, so that they, possibly, need cleaning!
Finally, let me recommend
this page where you can see color pictures of all van den Bergh objects! How about this one, vdB 33?
Ann
Okay, one more. Am I the only one who thinks that today's APOD looks like a weird sky over a landscape?
[quote=Guest post_id=331692 time=1686747200]
Who is the goofball that named this the shark nebula?
[/quote]
One person's goofball, another person's genius. :wink:
Anyway. There is a nice galaxy in the APOD, UGC 11861:
[float=left][attachment=1]APOD 14 June 2023 detail annotated.png[/attachment][/float]
[clear][/clear]
I liked the galaxy so much that I started looking for other pictures of it, but to my surprise, very few other images exist! One picture of UGC 11861 has been taken by dcrowson, and [url=https://cs.astronomy.com/asy/m/galaxies/492609.aspx]published in Astronomy Magazine[/url]. But how different it looks!!! :shock:
[float=left][attachment=2]UGC 11861 and 16 Cep dcrowson cropped.png[/attachment][c][size=85][color=#0040FF]UGC 11861 and bright star 16 Cep.
Credit: dcrowson.[/color][/size][/c][/float]
[clear][/clear]
[quote]dcrowson wrote:
UGC 11861 (PGC 67671 and others) is a [b][size=120][color=#BF8040]low surface brightness galaxy[/color][/size][/b] located approximately 58 million light-years away in Cepheus.
[/quote]
A low surface brightness galaxy, yes, I'd say! Today's APOD shows that UGC 11861 is a nice spiral galaxy that contains star formation, but judging from dcrowson's image, its overall color seems to be light brown from cosmic dust! The stars don't seem to add very much color to this galaxy, because there are relatively few of them.
Here is a picture of the Shark Nebula and UGC 11861 by Jim Thommes:
[img3="The Shark Nebula and UGC 11861 by Jim Thommes. Several of the stars look very blue, but the galaxy (at right) looks beige."]https://www.jthommes.com/Astro/images/LBN535_FSQ_PS4-IP-Crp_med.jpg[/img3]
So we have a foreground gas cloud that glows softly blue in places because it contains dust, which reflects the blue color primarily of stars hotter than the Sun. And then there is a background "gas and dark matter structure" that is light brown from dust!
[img3="An old woman sweeping cobwebs from the sky! Yikes!"]https://i.pinimg.com/originals/9f/2d/e2/9f2de270ba9f661864d05ff8d1e21148.jpg[/img3]
Well, if the old woman can only reach seventeen times as high as the Moon, then the nebulas of the sky should be safe from her broom! Even though they are dusty, so that they, possibly, need cleaning!
Finally, let me recommend [url=https://guinotmathieu.wixsite.com/astrophotographies/catalogue-de-van-den-bergh?lang=en]this page[/url] where you can see color pictures of all van den Bergh objects! How about this one, vdB 33?
[img3="van den Bergh 33. Credit: Laubing."]https://static.wixstatic.com/media/0ed765_7c80d8d3423f4ee9a13b356932d55922~mv2.jpg/v1/fill/w_980,h_1220,al_c,q_85,usm_0.66_1.00_0.01,enc_auto/vdb33%20laubing%20fsq106%20sbig16200.jpg[/img3]
Ann
Okay, one more. Am I the only one who thinks that today's APOD looks like a weird sky over a landscape?
[attachment=0]APOD 14 June annotated .png[/attachment]