Jimi Lowrey
August 10th, 2020, 03:09 AM
I Zw 136 —Leda 3087279 and Leda 2387685
Type— Galaxy Pair
Hercules
RA 16 13 31
DEC + 51 03 39
Mag A 15.7 V
Mag B 15.4 V
———————————————————————————
I observed this small cosmic crash last May and after my observation of it I was doing research on it and when I view the SDSS image of I ZW 136 I was surprised by the color of the pair in the Sloan image. The galaxy on the right I will call A (LEDA 3087279)and the galaxy on the left I will call B (LEDA 2387685) . The A galaxy was really blue and the galaxy on the left B was red looking. Over the years I have viewed hundreds of SDSS images and most or the time if you have an interacting galaxy pair at the same redshift they are the same color. I then looked at the redshift of the pair and B was at Z = .0334 and A had a bad redshift and was not to be trusted. Now I thought that because of the different color of the two galaxies that they were not interacting and one was foreground and the other was way behind thus the different color.
SDSS 3975image
So now I had to prove my assumption. I sent a note to my friend up the road at McDonald Observatory who is a resident astronomer and ask if we could get a spectrum of the A galaxy to get its redshift and prove my assumption. To my surprise he said that they were doing work on the 10.2 Meter HET telescope and were not doing science that night and could get my spectrum that night. What Luck!!
HET Telescope
3976
So on the last night of May I got my Spectrum of I ZW136 A. It takes a while to reduce and analyze the data. I have been waiting for the results.
Hubble image pushed of I ZW 136
3977
Yesterday in my in box I got the spectrum of I Zw 136. The redshift of the A galaxy is Z= .0334 that is the same as the B galaxy. So my theory of a discordant redshift of the two galaxies was completely WRONG! Oh well this often happens in science but as often happens when you answer one question it raises another.
My professional astronomer friends now want to know why the A galaxy is so blue. So Stand by for more from this unusual cosmic crash.
I observed I Zw 136 again last night and at 610X it was small and you could see the irregular shapes of A and B. Both galaxies look to be of equal brightness.
Give it a Go!
Type— Galaxy Pair
Hercules
RA 16 13 31
DEC + 51 03 39
Mag A 15.7 V
Mag B 15.4 V
———————————————————————————
I observed this small cosmic crash last May and after my observation of it I was doing research on it and when I view the SDSS image of I ZW 136 I was surprised by the color of the pair in the Sloan image. The galaxy on the right I will call A (LEDA 3087279)and the galaxy on the left I will call B (LEDA 2387685) . The A galaxy was really blue and the galaxy on the left B was red looking. Over the years I have viewed hundreds of SDSS images and most or the time if you have an interacting galaxy pair at the same redshift they are the same color. I then looked at the redshift of the pair and B was at Z = .0334 and A had a bad redshift and was not to be trusted. Now I thought that because of the different color of the two galaxies that they were not interacting and one was foreground and the other was way behind thus the different color.
SDSS 3975image
So now I had to prove my assumption. I sent a note to my friend up the road at McDonald Observatory who is a resident astronomer and ask if we could get a spectrum of the A galaxy to get its redshift and prove my assumption. To my surprise he said that they were doing work on the 10.2 Meter HET telescope and were not doing science that night and could get my spectrum that night. What Luck!!
HET Telescope
3976
So on the last night of May I got my Spectrum of I ZW136 A. It takes a while to reduce and analyze the data. I have been waiting for the results.
Hubble image pushed of I ZW 136
3977
Yesterday in my in box I got the spectrum of I Zw 136. The redshift of the A galaxy is Z= .0334 that is the same as the B galaxy. So my theory of a discordant redshift of the two galaxies was completely WRONG! Oh well this often happens in science but as often happens when you answer one question it raises another.
My professional astronomer friends now want to know why the A galaxy is so blue. So Stand by for more from this unusual cosmic crash.
I observed I Zw 136 again last night and at 610X it was small and you could see the irregular shapes of A and B. Both galaxies look to be of equal brightness.
Give it a Go!