FaintFuzzies
November 25th, 2019, 05:48 AM
Object of the Week Nov 24, 2019 – Arp 331 – Chain of Galaxies in Pisces
Coordinates for the middle galaxy of the chain:
NGC 383 RA: 01 07 25 Dec: +32 24 45 Mag 13.4v
I think this is a pretty cool chain of 8 NGC galaxies spanning a north-south length of less than 20’. The member galaxies range from mag 12.9v to 15.5v, so a 10 inch under dark skies should be able to see all, but one. A 16” should catch the last one, NGC 387.
I enjoy looking at galaxy chains and this is a great example of a fairly bright chain and well placed in the late fall sky.
Listing from north to south. (copied from my Arp book)
NGC 379 (mag 12.8v) – bright, 2:1 elongated patch with diffuse edges. Brighter slightly elongated nucleus. PA = 0 and 1.2’ long.
NGC 380 (13.6b) – bright, round, much brighter center. 1’ in diameter.
NGC 383 (13.4v) – very bright, round, brighter center. Diffuse edges and 1’ across.
NGC 382 (14.2p) – bright small round even surface brightness patch. About 30” across. This is almost merged with NGC 383 on the NE edge.
NGC 387 (15.5) – considerably faint, small round, stellar nucleus. 10” across
NGC 386 (14.3v) – bright small round, nearly stellar nucleus. 15” across.
NGC 385 (12.9v) – bright round patch with a brighter center with a nearly stellar nucleus. 30” across.
NGC 388 (14.3v) – very faint, small round even surface brightness patch. 15” across
NGC 384 (13.1v)– bright small round much brighter center to a nearly stellar nucleus. 30” across
Observed with my 22” @ 184, 255, 305 and 458x under NELM 6.5 skies.
3716
Arp 331 with the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
3718
Labeled inverted DSS image
3717
Eyepiece rendition with my 22” at 255x. Field: 19.3’
So Give it a go and Let us know!
Coordinates for the middle galaxy of the chain:
NGC 383 RA: 01 07 25 Dec: +32 24 45 Mag 13.4v
I think this is a pretty cool chain of 8 NGC galaxies spanning a north-south length of less than 20’. The member galaxies range from mag 12.9v to 15.5v, so a 10 inch under dark skies should be able to see all, but one. A 16” should catch the last one, NGC 387.
I enjoy looking at galaxy chains and this is a great example of a fairly bright chain and well placed in the late fall sky.
Listing from north to south. (copied from my Arp book)
NGC 379 (mag 12.8v) – bright, 2:1 elongated patch with diffuse edges. Brighter slightly elongated nucleus. PA = 0 and 1.2’ long.
NGC 380 (13.6b) – bright, round, much brighter center. 1’ in diameter.
NGC 383 (13.4v) – very bright, round, brighter center. Diffuse edges and 1’ across.
NGC 382 (14.2p) – bright small round even surface brightness patch. About 30” across. This is almost merged with NGC 383 on the NE edge.
NGC 387 (15.5) – considerably faint, small round, stellar nucleus. 10” across
NGC 386 (14.3v) – bright small round, nearly stellar nucleus. 15” across.
NGC 385 (12.9v) – bright round patch with a brighter center with a nearly stellar nucleus. 30” across.
NGC 388 (14.3v) – very faint, small round even surface brightness patch. 15” across
NGC 384 (13.1v)– bright small round much brighter center to a nearly stellar nucleus. 30” across
Observed with my 22” @ 184, 255, 305 and 458x under NELM 6.5 skies.
3716
Arp 331 with the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
3718
Labeled inverted DSS image
3717
Eyepiece rendition with my 22” at 255x. Field: 19.3’
So Give it a go and Let us know!