FaintFuzzies
November 26th, 2022, 05:31 AM
Compact Galaxy Group of 4 members
RA (brightest galaxy of the group): 04h 27m 18.6s
Dec : -10? 18’ 22”
Size: All 4 members within a 1.7’ circle.
Mag range: 15.9b to 17.8
Apologize for the late post (again) as I was traveling for the last two weeks. I regret to say that I have been pretty inactive in the deep sky community and amateur astronomy in general in the last 5+ years, so to be fair to others and myself, this will be my last contribution to OOTW for the foreseeable future. About 5 years ago, my interest started to slow down, then my last time observing with my 22” was in October 2019. I may be one of the first, if not the first, to visually observe Andromeda’s Parachute and hoped that would get my excitement back. Sadly, it didn’t.
My website will remain up for the foreseeable future, so future deep sky hounds have stuff to download for free and use. I’m glad to see many new deep sky observers coming around as I see names I do not recognize.
One of the main reasons is that I’m in my second stint through grad school, this time not in a STEM field. I already went through that route and my original doctoral studies were on the study of the chemistry of genetic material, centered on gene recognition and modification. This time is something else.
--
On to the OOTW, I’m posting from one of my longtime favorite lists, the Hickson Galaxy Groups. This object is a very compact group of 4 galaxies crammed in a 1.7’ space. It is certainly one of the more challenging Hickson groups, but a good challenge even in my 22” reflector under dark skies. I encourage you to give it a shot if you have a 16” or larger telescope.
At 528x, this is a fairly difficult group containing four member galaxies about 1.7’ apart in a crooked N-S line.
Component A (PGC 15136) – This primary galaxy is a very thin, faint spindle with a nearly stellar core. Averted vision gives about 20% more length to a total of 45” long and about 10” wide. Position angle is 170?. A 15.0 magnitude star is about 50” north of the center.
Component B (PGC 15141) – This member is a very faint, very small round spot. Size is about 20” across. It lies about 50” SSE of PGC 15136. PGC 15139 lies less than 20” west of the center; it seems to be attached to the halo.
Component C (PGC 15135) – This member is an extremely faint and very small round fuzzy spot. It is located about 25” due south of PGC 15136.
Component D (PGC 15139) – Re-observation of this group reveals that this “16th” magnitude star noted just to the west of PGC 15141 was actually PGC 15139 (Component D). This appears as a stellar object with very little halo visible at 528x and higher.
4927
Labelled DSS image
4926
Eyepiece rendition
22” reflector @ 377x, field: 10.3’ NELM: 6.5.
Anyhow, as always, give it a shot and let us know.
RA (brightest galaxy of the group): 04h 27m 18.6s
Dec : -10? 18’ 22”
Size: All 4 members within a 1.7’ circle.
Mag range: 15.9b to 17.8
Apologize for the late post (again) as I was traveling for the last two weeks. I regret to say that I have been pretty inactive in the deep sky community and amateur astronomy in general in the last 5+ years, so to be fair to others and myself, this will be my last contribution to OOTW for the foreseeable future. About 5 years ago, my interest started to slow down, then my last time observing with my 22” was in October 2019. I may be one of the first, if not the first, to visually observe Andromeda’s Parachute and hoped that would get my excitement back. Sadly, it didn’t.
My website will remain up for the foreseeable future, so future deep sky hounds have stuff to download for free and use. I’m glad to see many new deep sky observers coming around as I see names I do not recognize.
One of the main reasons is that I’m in my second stint through grad school, this time not in a STEM field. I already went through that route and my original doctoral studies were on the study of the chemistry of genetic material, centered on gene recognition and modification. This time is something else.
--
On to the OOTW, I’m posting from one of my longtime favorite lists, the Hickson Galaxy Groups. This object is a very compact group of 4 galaxies crammed in a 1.7’ space. It is certainly one of the more challenging Hickson groups, but a good challenge even in my 22” reflector under dark skies. I encourage you to give it a shot if you have a 16” or larger telescope.
At 528x, this is a fairly difficult group containing four member galaxies about 1.7’ apart in a crooked N-S line.
Component A (PGC 15136) – This primary galaxy is a very thin, faint spindle with a nearly stellar core. Averted vision gives about 20% more length to a total of 45” long and about 10” wide. Position angle is 170?. A 15.0 magnitude star is about 50” north of the center.
Component B (PGC 15141) – This member is a very faint, very small round spot. Size is about 20” across. It lies about 50” SSE of PGC 15136. PGC 15139 lies less than 20” west of the center; it seems to be attached to the halo.
Component C (PGC 15135) – This member is an extremely faint and very small round fuzzy spot. It is located about 25” due south of PGC 15136.
Component D (PGC 15139) – Re-observation of this group reveals that this “16th” magnitude star noted just to the west of PGC 15141 was actually PGC 15139 (Component D). This appears as a stellar object with very little halo visible at 528x and higher.
4927
Labelled DSS image
4926
Eyepiece rendition
22” reflector @ 377x, field: 10.3’ NELM: 6.5.
Anyhow, as always, give it a shot and let us know.