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Clear Skies
October 17th, 2021, 11:26 AM
At DSF we like galaxies. We like obscure ones. Interacting pairs, distortion. The skies of autumn provide us with plenty.

One such pair, in the constellation of Andromeda, consists of the galaxies NGC218 and MCG+06-02-017 (PGC2726). They go by Vorontsov-Vel'yaminov 527. Karachentsev listed these two as nr. 16 on his list of northern interacting pairs (KPG). The position is 00:46:35 +36d20m00s. That's exactly 3 degrees due southwest of Mu Andromeda, shining bright at mag. 3.9, and 5 degrees south of Messier 31.

Interaction and distortion is clear in both galaxies but the western one, NGC218, accounts for most of the spectacle. It was discovered on this day, October 17 in the year 1876 by French astronomer Édouard Stephan (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Édouard_Stephan). Arp 319, "Stephan's Quintet" is named after him.

Both the POSS2 Blue (https://archive.stsci.edu/cgi-bin/dss_search?v=poss2ukstu_blue&r=00+46+35.35&d=%2B36+19+42.6&e=J2000&h=10&w=10&f=gif&c=none&fov=NONE&v3=) plate and the SDSS (http://skyserver.sdss.org/dr16/SkyServerWS/ImgCutout/getjpeg?TaskName=Skyserver.Chart.Image&ra=11.64729&dec=36.3285&scale=0.294&width=2041&height=2041&opt=&query=) image (we're in luck, as its right on the edge of the survey's coverage) reveal ragged structure and twisted arms, with bifurcation on the northern edge of the western arm. The small core is clearly offset, with a small, curved, brighter arm directly southeast.

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Here's the pair in a PanSTARRS image (http://aladin.unistra.fr/AladinLite/?target=00%2046%2035.350%2B36%2019%2042.60&fov=0.1668&survey=P%2FPanSTARRS%2FDR1%2Fcolor-z-zg-g), through Aladin.

The smaller and fainter eastern galaxy, MCG+06-02-017, unmistakably shows distortion, too, but it's details will be tough to grab. It's elongated with a faint outer halo that has an extension on the south-southeastern side. It sports a faint nucleus. A mag. 15.4 star is on the southeastern edge.

Boris Vorontsov-Vel'yaminov (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boris_Vorontsov-Velyaminov) categorized the pair (page 26 (http://articles.adsabs.harvard.edu/pdf/1977A%26AS...28....1V)) as an evident and possible nest, describing NGC218 as Several coalescent galaxies of various dimensions. Strong perturbations. The MCG notes describe the pair as a Nest with clear pair.

Igor Karachentsev (https://www.iau.org/administration/membership/individual/3989/) described two spirals (https://ned.ipac.caltech.edu/level5/Sept02/Keel/Keel_contents.html): Disturbances in the spiral structure or general form of both components and added the note, for NGC218: Large internal motions, emissions not from the core.

Ten days..... ten nights ago, just before midnight, I observed these galaxies from the French Alps, about 125 km. north of Marseille Observatory (website (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marseille_Observatory) / Wikipedia (https://www.lam.fr/le-laboratoire/article/presentation?lang=en)) where Stephan worked over a century ago. My instrument was my 14" SCT:

NGC218 (KPG 16A) is an irregular, round glow without AV, with AV it is clearly flattened on the eastern side on a line from NNE to SSW. Brightest SE of the middle and gradually fainter towards the NW. Clearly irregular with AV but arms can not be discerned and no nucleus is visible.



ENE of NGC218 is a very faint, slightly north to south elongated glow (MCG+06-02-017, KPG 16B), at the limit of visibility without AV. With AV gradually brighter in the middle, no nucleus visible. The star on the SE edge is not visible.



A nice view.


I rated it 6/10.

As always, the CSOG observing guide for the current DSF OOTW - click here (https://clearskies.eu/csog/downloads/dsfootw#42) - can be downloaded without registration.

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Give 'em a go, and let us know!

Steve Gottlieb
October 17th, 2021, 06:21 PM
I've observed the pair twice -- once with my 17.5" in 2002 and again with my 24" in 2014. Unfortunately, the more recent observation was in poor seeing and fair transparency using 260x.


NGC 218 = UGC 480: Moderately bright and large, irregularly round, ~0.8' diameter though the halo increases in size and shape with averted vision. A brighter nucleus is offset to the east side of the galaxy, so could be mistaken for a knot in the halo. Forms an interacting pair (VV 527) with CGCG 519-022 1.4' ENE.

CGCG 519-022 = MCG +06-02-017: Fairly faint, slightly elongated N-S, ~0.4'x0.2', very weak concentration.

By the way, LEDA (http://atlas.obs-hp.fr/hyperleda/ledacat.cgi?NGC%20218&ob=ra), SIMBAD (http://simbad.u-strasbg.fr/simbad/sim-id?Ident=NGC+218&NbIdent=1&Radius=2&Radius.unit=arcmin&submit=submit+id) and others misidentify UGC 440 as NGC 218. You can read the story, which I helped solve, at Harold Corwin's NGC identification page (http://www.haroldcorwin.net/ngcic/ngcnotes.all) (scroll down to NGC 218).

Vorontsov-Vel'yaminov, who sometimes misinterpreted (due to poor resolution on the POSS1) star-forming knots as multiple interacting galaxies or "nests", called NGC 210 "The Pattern". This was in his 1975 paper "Nine Enigmatic New Objects (http://articles.adsabs.harvard.edu/pdf/1975SvAL....1...23V)". He also liked nicknames and the same paper includes the "Spider" (UGC 5829 = VV 794), the "Zig-zag" (MCG -01-30-022 = VV 544), the "Sign" (UGC 8290 = VV 559) and the "Marvel" (UGC 8892 = VV 792)!

Uwe Glahn
October 18th, 2021, 05:13 PM
Found a 3 years young observation. Beside the more detailed sketch I noted:

wonderful pair with low surface brightness; details immediately and clear visible; little distinct nuclei in both galaxies; NGC 218 with three different prominent arms; companion with twisted and short arms

sketch: 27", 419x, NELM 7m0+, Seeing II-III
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home (http://www.deepsky-visuell.de/Zeichnungen/NGC218.htm)