by Ann » Fri Jul 26, 2024 6:02 am
I like today's APOD
but I dislike the fact that the picture is so large that I have to post it as an attachment!
Facing NGC 6946. Image Credit & Copyright: Roberto Marinoni
At first I didn't recognize NGC 6946 in the APOD, partly because north is not up in the image, which is conventional.
The positions of two past supernova explosions are shown in the Kitt Peak National Observatory image. All ten of the recent supernova explosions are shown in this picture
(and now I have to post my second attachment):
Ten past supernova explosions in NGC 6946.
Credit: Probably Knox S. Long et al.
My favorite picture of NGC 6946 is actually an infrared one by Hubble:
Beautiful, isn't it?
My own favorite aspect of NGC 6946 is the fantastic super star cluster that it contains. You can see it at upper right n the infrared Hubble image I just posted. Okay, I'll do my third attachment now, why not?
An infrared portrait of the super star cluster in NGC 6946.
Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA, A. Leroy, K. S. Long
Yu.N.Efremov et al. wrote about the super star cluster in NGC 6946:
The characteristics of ionized and HI gas in the peculiar star/cluster complex in NGC 6946, obtained with the 6-m telescope (BTA) SAO RAS, the Gemini North telescope, and the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope (WSRT), are presented.
The complex is unusual as hosting a super star cluster, the most massive known in an apparently non-interacting giant galaxy.
Impressive, NGC 6946!
So it is larger than R136 in the Large Magellanic Cloud, then? Or is the LMC defined as interacting (with both the SMC and the Milky Way)? Also the LMC is not a giant galaxy, certainly.
R136, you'e got nothing on the super star cluster in NGC 6946 (maybe?)!
Anyway. The caption said that NGC 6946 is in Cepheus. Well, I don't think so!
Because unless my software is very wrong, NGC 6946 is straddling the border of Cepheus and Cygnus!
Ann
I like today's APOD :D but I dislike the fact that the picture is so large that I have to post it as an attachment! ☹️
[float=left][attachment=2]NGC6946_verB1024c[1].jpg[/attachment][c][size=85][color=#0040FF]Facing NGC 6946. Image Credit & Copyright: Roberto Marinoni[/color][/size][/c][/float]
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At first I didn't recognize NGC 6946 in the APOD, partly because north is not up in the image, which is conventional.
[img3="NGC 6946, in a picture where north is up and east to the left, as is conventional. Credit: Kitt Peak National Observatory"]https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/30/NGC_6946_%28Kitt_Peak_National_Observatory%29_%282023-115%29.png/383px-NGC_6946_%28Kitt_Peak_National_Observatory%29_%282023-115%29.png[/img3]
The positions of two past supernova explosions are shown in the Kitt Peak National Observatory image. All ten of the recent supernova explosions are shown in this picture 😀 (and now I have to post my second attachment): ☹️
[float=left][attachment=1]fig1-12[1].jpg[/attachment][c][size=85][color=#0040FF]Ten past supernova explosions in NGC 6946.
Credit: Probably Knox S. Long et al.[/color][/size][/c][/float]
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My favorite picture of NGC 6946 is actually an infrared one by Hubble:
[img3="NGC 6946 in near infrared. Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA, A. Leroy, K. S. Long"]https://cdn.esahubble.org/archives/images/screen/potw2101a.jpg[/img3]
Beautiful, isn't it? :D
My own favorite aspect of NGC 6946 is the fantastic super star cluster that it contains. You can see it at upper right n the infrared Hubble image I just posted. Okay, I'll do my third attachment now, why not? :(
[float=left][attachment=0]Super star cluster in NGC 6946 ESA Hubble NASA, A Leroy K S Long.png[/attachment][c][size=85][color=#0040FF]An infrared portrait of the super star cluster in NGC 6946.
Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA, A. Leroy, K. S. Long[/color][/size][/c][/float][float=right][img3="A visible-light portrait of the super star cluster in NGC 6946. Credit: HST/Søren Larsen"]http://www.ucolick.org/~soeren/astropics/n6946pc.gif[/img3][/float]
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[quote][url=https://www.semanticscholar.org/reader/f2e98c3cbec5157d4accae5c6f55f6a0b69d5393]Yu.N.Efremov et al.[/url] wrote about the super star cluster in NGC 6946:
The characteristics of ionized and HI gas in the peculiar star/cluster complex in NGC 6946, obtained with the 6-m telescope (BTA) SAO RAS, the Gemini North telescope, and the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope (WSRT), are presented. [b][color=#0040FF]The complex is unusual as hosting a super star cluster, the most massive known in an apparently non-interacting giant galaxy.[/color][/b][/quote]
Impressive, NGC 6946! 😀 So it is larger than R136 in the Large Magellanic Cloud, then? Or is the LMC defined as interacting (with both the SMC and the Milky Way)? Also the LMC is not a giant galaxy, certainly.
[img3="R136 in the Large Magellanic Cloud. Credit: NASA, ESA, P Crowther (University of Sheffield)"]https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/42/R136_observed_with_WFC3.jpg/605px-R136_observed_with_WFC3.jpg?20160322235916[/img3]
R136, you'e got nothing on the super star cluster in NGC 6946 (maybe?)!
Anyway. The caption said that NGC 6946 is in Cepheus. Well, I don't think so!
[img3="The Big Split. Jean-Claude Van Damme in an advertisement for Volvo."]https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/9/9f/Epic_Split_Volvo_Trucks_commercial.png[/img3]
Because unless my software is very wrong, NGC 6946 is straddling the border of Cepheus and Cygnus!
Ann