by mudman » Tue Apr 05, 2005 6:02 am
On Jan 26 The Meal suggested the unusual formation noted in the upper left hand corner of APOD 2005 Jan 25 Fireworks galaxy might be "Is it not the irregular dwarf galaxy UGC 11583?"
It appears not, based on the following:
Companions and interactions in the NGC 6946 system
Authors: Pisano D.J.; Wilcots E.M.
Source: Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, December 2000, vol. 319, no. 3, pp. 821-825(5)
covered three dwarf galaxies around NGC 6946: UGC 11583,. L149, and L150. ...
identified (from east to west) as L149 and UGC 11583
Our survey recovered two previously detected dwarf galaxies associated with NGC 6946, but otherwise found no signatures of interactions in the NGC 6946 system. The companions are small enough, and distant enough from NGC 6946 that they should have minimal effect on the main galaxy.
On Jan 26 The Meal suggested the unusual formation noted in the upper left hand corner of APOD 2005 Jan 25 Fireworks galaxy might be "Is it not the irregular dwarf galaxy UGC 11583?"
It appears not, based on the following:
Companions and interactions in the NGC 6946 system
Authors: Pisano D.J.; Wilcots E.M.
Source: Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, December 2000, vol. 319, no. 3, pp. 821-825(5)
covered three dwarf galaxies around NGC 6946: UGC 11583,. L149, and L150. ...
identified (from east to west) as L149 and UGC 11583
Our survey recovered two previously detected dwarf galaxies associated with NGC 6946, but otherwise found no signatures of interactions in the NGC 6946 system. The companions are small enough, and distant enough from NGC 6946 that they should have minimal effect on the main galaxy.