Steve Gottlieb
April 29th, 2013, 09:39 PM
In early April, Howard Banich and I observed 4 nights with Jimi's 48-inch f/4, along with Jim Chandler on the last night. In a series of posts, I'll highlight some of the showpiece galaxies we observed, along with some of the obscure, challenging stuff.
The first target is 10th-magnitude NGC 4559, which was discovered by William Herschel on 11 Apr 1785 and described as "vB vL, mE np sf, 10 or 12' long, four stars in it." John Herschel made three observations and logged "vL; gbM, but not to a nucleus; mE; has 3 stars south following. By a diagram, the southern end is broader than the norther, giving it a clubbed appeared."
Although NGC 4559 was observed twice at Birr Castle with the 72-inch, I'm surprised Bindon Stoney (observing assistant) didn't comment on any non-stellar knots. These were first catalogued by Max Wolf from a Heidelberg plate in 1903. IC 3550-52, IC 3555, and IC 3563-64 refer to HII regions and/or star clouds within the arms of NGC 4559 and IC 3554 is a star, which Wolf thought might be nebulous.
At 375x this showpiece galaxy extended 3:1 NW-SE, 9'x3' with a large bright core that gradually increased to the center. The core appeared irregular, mottled and dusty. The inner portion of the disc revealed weak spiral structure. At 488x, the outer halo was very patchy with several knots. Superimposed on the southeast side are three mag 12/12.5/13 stars between 1.5'-2' from center and the galaxy faded out rapidly beyond these stars to the southeast. Near the southeast end is IC 3563, a very compact HII region and IC 3564, a star association attached on the east side. Both objects were easily visible, but not resolved, as a fairly faint 20" patch, 3' SE of center.
The outer halo faded out gradually and extends much further on the northwest side, extending up to 5' NW of center. IC 3555 is faint, 20"x10" HII region, extended NW-SE, and situated 1.8' NNW of center in the halo. IC 3552, a smaller HII region close NW, was not seen. IC 3551 is faint, 10" HII knot on the west edge, 0.9' WNW of center. IC 3554 is a mag 15 star 2.1' SSW of center (at the edge of the visible disc) and IC 3550 = NGC 4559C was seen as a faint, 8" knot, that appears as a small, detached HII knot 0.8' WNW of the star.
I'm curious if others have looked for these HII regions and what have been the results?
609
The first target is 10th-magnitude NGC 4559, which was discovered by William Herschel on 11 Apr 1785 and described as "vB vL, mE np sf, 10 or 12' long, four stars in it." John Herschel made three observations and logged "vL; gbM, but not to a nucleus; mE; has 3 stars south following. By a diagram, the southern end is broader than the norther, giving it a clubbed appeared."
Although NGC 4559 was observed twice at Birr Castle with the 72-inch, I'm surprised Bindon Stoney (observing assistant) didn't comment on any non-stellar knots. These were first catalogued by Max Wolf from a Heidelberg plate in 1903. IC 3550-52, IC 3555, and IC 3563-64 refer to HII regions and/or star clouds within the arms of NGC 4559 and IC 3554 is a star, which Wolf thought might be nebulous.
At 375x this showpiece galaxy extended 3:1 NW-SE, 9'x3' with a large bright core that gradually increased to the center. The core appeared irregular, mottled and dusty. The inner portion of the disc revealed weak spiral structure. At 488x, the outer halo was very patchy with several knots. Superimposed on the southeast side are three mag 12/12.5/13 stars between 1.5'-2' from center and the galaxy faded out rapidly beyond these stars to the southeast. Near the southeast end is IC 3563, a very compact HII region and IC 3564, a star association attached on the east side. Both objects were easily visible, but not resolved, as a fairly faint 20" patch, 3' SE of center.
The outer halo faded out gradually and extends much further on the northwest side, extending up to 5' NW of center. IC 3555 is faint, 20"x10" HII region, extended NW-SE, and situated 1.8' NNW of center in the halo. IC 3552, a smaller HII region close NW, was not seen. IC 3551 is faint, 10" HII knot on the west edge, 0.9' WNW of center. IC 3554 is a mag 15 star 2.1' SSW of center (at the edge of the visible disc) and IC 3550 = NGC 4559C was seen as a faint, 8" knot, that appears as a small, detached HII knot 0.8' WNW of the star.
I'm curious if others have looked for these HII regions and what have been the results?
609