florid_snow wrote:MarkBour wrote:Visual_Astronomer wrote:The blue-ringed spiral near the bottom-center of the image is very interesting. Upon close inspection it looks like there is a small round object silhouetted in front of it. Is this real, or an artifact?
Good eye, to have noticed that. I really like the coloring of that galaxy. I hope you find out what the black speck is, and that it's something amazing. I wonder if it is anywhere near the galaxy.
The image author talks about it on his website! Here's a link to an image he made comparing with some other observations (what an amazing comparison by the way... a 12.5" newtonian on par with telescopes with apertures in meters!)
http://www.rolfolsenastrophotography.co ... -fgcM3NZ/A
And here's a link he gives to a paper about the dust cloud:
http://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.10 ... ld.iop.org
Thanks for posting that, florid_snow! It is hugely interesting, and it underscores Rolf Olsen's fantastic skill and dedication as an astrophotographer.
I googled the Antlia Cluster and looked for pictures, but I found nothing that is the least bit comparable with Rolf's great image. Again, thanks, Rolf!
The dust cloud in the blue-ringed galaxy near bottom center is very interesting for several reasons. You have to wonder how such a strange feature formed, but this dark dust patch also underscores how little dust there seems to be in the Antlia Cluster galaxies in general. The most obvious dust I can spot is a dust ring in a yellow galaxy near top center. Of course there are other galaxies with visible dust as well, but in general, the galaxies here are not dusty.
There are two other galaxies I find interesting. One is a "perfect spiral" at center right. It is fantastically well-formed, and because it is
so regular in shape, I would guess there is not much star formation in it.
The other is a "chunky-looking" yellow galaxy to the upper right of the bright elliptical galaxy at bottom center. The chunky galaxy has a bright, obvious halo that comes to a sudden "stop" - it is truncated. I can find no other galaxy with such a strange halo in the image.
Again, this is a fantastic image!
Ann