wvreeven
December 20th, 2018, 10:18 AM
NGC 1961, Arp 184, IC 2133
LINER-type Active Galaxy Nucleus
Constellation: Camelopardus
RA: 05 42 04.775
Dec: +69 22 42.17
Visual magnitude: 10.99
Dimensions: 4'.6 x 3'.0
Since I will be travelling for Xmas and will not be able to add this OOTW later, I'll do it now. Happy Xmas and all the best for 2019!
Camelopardus for some reason is a constellation that I do not visit often. But it is a constellation that is very rich in objects, both galactic and extra-galactic. One of the objects I did visit is NGC 1961.
NGC 1961 was discovered by William Herschel on December 3, 1788, so almost exactly 230 years ago. Halton Arp added the galaxy as number 184 to his famous atlas in the category Galaxies With Narrow Filaments. The galaxy lies at a distance of about 200 million light years from Earth giving it a size of over 220 thousand light years across.
3280
The galaxy itself appears distorted but no companion has been identified nor has a double nucleus been found indicating a recent merger. Despite that, the spiral arms are highly irregular with two straight arms extending to the north.
NGC 1961 was identified to be in a small group with 7 other galaxies. You can look them all up easily when you're observing NGC 1961 because they all lie close by as can be seen in this image.
3281
My own observation log with my 20" telescope reads
"At 320x the galaxy is pretty large. To the south lies a pretty bright star and between the star and the nucleus of the galaxy I see a dark lane. The galaxy continues on the other side of the star. To the west lies another star and the galaxy nearly touches the star. The Moon is still above the horizon and the SQM value is 21.2."
so I'll need to visit this galaxy again under darker skies. I am curious if you manage(d) to see the two anomalous spiral arms.
As always,
"Give it a go and let us know!
Good luck and great viewing!"
LINER-type Active Galaxy Nucleus
Constellation: Camelopardus
RA: 05 42 04.775
Dec: +69 22 42.17
Visual magnitude: 10.99
Dimensions: 4'.6 x 3'.0
Since I will be travelling for Xmas and will not be able to add this OOTW later, I'll do it now. Happy Xmas and all the best for 2019!
Camelopardus for some reason is a constellation that I do not visit often. But it is a constellation that is very rich in objects, both galactic and extra-galactic. One of the objects I did visit is NGC 1961.
NGC 1961 was discovered by William Herschel on December 3, 1788, so almost exactly 230 years ago. Halton Arp added the galaxy as number 184 to his famous atlas in the category Galaxies With Narrow Filaments. The galaxy lies at a distance of about 200 million light years from Earth giving it a size of over 220 thousand light years across.
3280
The galaxy itself appears distorted but no companion has been identified nor has a double nucleus been found indicating a recent merger. Despite that, the spiral arms are highly irregular with two straight arms extending to the north.
NGC 1961 was identified to be in a small group with 7 other galaxies. You can look them all up easily when you're observing NGC 1961 because they all lie close by as can be seen in this image.
3281
My own observation log with my 20" telescope reads
"At 320x the galaxy is pretty large. To the south lies a pretty bright star and between the star and the nucleus of the galaxy I see a dark lane. The galaxy continues on the other side of the star. To the west lies another star and the galaxy nearly touches the star. The Moon is still above the horizon and the SQM value is 21.2."
so I'll need to visit this galaxy again under darker skies. I am curious if you manage(d) to see the two anomalous spiral arms.
As always,
"Give it a go and let us know!
Good luck and great viewing!"