akarsh
January 17th, 2016, 11:43 AM
Hi
I just came across this group randomly while testing KStars (!)
https://archive.stsci.edu/cgi-bin/dss_search?v=poss2ukstu_blue&r=00+21+31.70&d=-48+37+29.1&e=J2000&h=15.0&w=15.0&f=gif&c=none&fov=NONE&v3=
Apparently, this is "Robert's Quartet". [ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert's_Quartet ]
I hadn't heard of it at all, probably because of it's very southern declination, which prevents it from crossing airmass 2.4 almost from Texas latitudes even.
NGC 92 seems to have an interesting tidal tail.
I'm wondering if anyone has grabbed it in the forum. It being in the NGC, it's almost certain that Steve has seen it. Comparing with the Mice galaxies (which sport pretty much the only tidal tail I'm aware of that's accessible in an 18"), it seems like it would need at least a 25~30" from 30 °N latitude?
Clear Skies
Regards
Akarsh
I just came across this group randomly while testing KStars (!)
https://archive.stsci.edu/cgi-bin/dss_search?v=poss2ukstu_blue&r=00+21+31.70&d=-48+37+29.1&e=J2000&h=15.0&w=15.0&f=gif&c=none&fov=NONE&v3=
Apparently, this is "Robert's Quartet". [ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert's_Quartet ]
I hadn't heard of it at all, probably because of it's very southern declination, which prevents it from crossing airmass 2.4 almost from Texas latitudes even.
NGC 92 seems to have an interesting tidal tail.
I'm wondering if anyone has grabbed it in the forum. It being in the NGC, it's almost certain that Steve has seen it. Comparing with the Mice galaxies (which sport pretty much the only tidal tail I'm aware of that's accessible in an 18"), it seems like it would need at least a 25~30" from 30 °N latitude?
Clear Skies
Regards
Akarsh