NGC 1386

Galaxie
NGC 1386
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Aufnahme mittels VLT Survey Telescope
AladinLite
SternbildEridanus
Position
ÄquinoktiumJ2000.0, Epoche: J2000.0
Rektaszension03h 36m 46,3s [1]
Deklination−35° 59′ 56″ [1]
Erscheinungsbild
Morphologischer TypSB(s)0+ / Sy2[1]
Helligkeit (visuell)11,2 mag[2]
Helligkeit (B-Band)12,1 mag[2]
Winkel­ausdehnung3,4′ × 1,3′[2]
Positionswinkel25°[2]
Inklination°
Flächen­helligkeit12.7 mag/arcmin²[2]
Physikalische Daten
ZugehörigkeitFornax Cluster
LGG 98[1][3]
Rotverschiebung0.002895 ± 0.000017[1]
Radial­geschwin­digkeit(868 ± 5) km/s[1]
Hubbledistanz
H0 = 73 km/(s • Mpc)
(33 ± 2) · 106 Lj
(10,2 ± 0,7) Mpc [1]
Absolute Helligkeitmag
MasseM
Durchmesser35.000 Lj[4]
Metallizität [Fe/H]{{{Metallizität}}}
Geschichte
EntdeckungJulius Schmidt
Entdeckungsdatum19. Januar 1865
Katalogbezeichnungen
NGC 1386 • PGC 13333 • ESO 358-035 • MCG -06-09-005 • IRAS 03348-3609 • 2MASX J03364623-3559573 • SGC 33452-3609.8 • FCC 179 • LDCE 249 NED026 • GALEXASC J033646.17-355958.1

NGC 1386 ist eine linsenförmige Galaxie mit aktivem Galaxienkern vom Hubble-Typ S0/a im Sternbild Eridanus. Sie ist schätzungsweise 33 Millionen Lichtjahre von der Milchstraße entfernt und hat einen Durchmesser von etwa 35.000 Lj. Unter der Katalognummer FCC 179 ist sie als Mitglied des Fornax-Galaxienhaufens gelistet.

Im selben Himmelsareal befinden sich u. a. die Galaxien NGC 1369, NGC 1379, NGC 1387, NGC 1389.

Das Objekt wurde von dem deutschen Astronomen Julius Schmidt 1865 mit einem 15,75-cm-Teleskop entdeckt.[5]

NGC 1386-Gruppe (LGG 98)

GalaxieAlternativnameEntfernung/Mio. Lj
NGC 1386PGC 1333333
NGC 1326BPGC 1278839
NGC 1375PGC 1326628
NGC 1389PGC 1336036
NGC 1396PGC 1339831
PGC 13753ESO 358-5940
PGC 13756ESO 358-6030
PGC 1344930
Commons: NGC 1386 – Sammlung von Bildern, Videos und Audiodateien

Einzelnachweise

  1. a b c d e NASA/IPAC EXTRAGALACTIC DATABASE
  2. a b c d e SEDS: NGC 1386
  3. VizieR
  4. NASA/IPAC
  5. Seligman

Auf dieser Seite verwendete Medien

A galactic rejuvenation (potw2444a).jpg
Autor/Urheber: ESO/ALMA (ESO/NAOJ/NRAO)/A. Prieto et al./Fornax Deep Survey, Lizenz: CC BY 4.0
Something odd is happening in NGC 1386, a spiral galaxy located 53 million light years away in the constellation Eridanus. This Picture of the Week combines data from the VLT Survey Telescope (VST), hosted at ESO’s Paranal Observatory in Chile, and the Atacama Large Millimetre/Submillimetre Array (ALMA), operated by ESO and its international partners. When astronomers observed the central regions of this galaxy, they found new stars forming… albeit in a peculiar way.Stars often form within stellar clusters – groups of thousands of stars that originate from massive clouds of molecular gas. The blue ring at the centre of this galaxy is ripe with stellar clusters full of young stars, as seen by VST. A new study led by Almudena Prieto, an astronomer at the Instituto de Astrofísica de Canarias in Spain, used data from ESO’s Very Large Telescope (VLT) and the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope to look at this ring in more detail. The data shows that all of these star clusters formed 4 million years ago, almost simultaneously. It is the first time that synchronised star formation has been observed in a galaxy that contains mostly old stars.The same study used ALMA to reveal even more secrets in this galaxy. Shown in this picture as a golden ring are a multitude of clouds of gas, ready to form a second batch of young stars. For these to be born, though, we will still have to wait 5 million years. Even if old, NGC 1386 keeps rejuvenating itself.
The NGC 1386 galaxy as seen by the VLT Survey Telescope (potw2444c).jpg
Autor/Urheber: ESO/Fornax Deep Survey, Lizenz: CC BY 4.0
This image shows the spiral galaxy NGC 1386 observed by the VLT Survey Telescope (VST), hosted at ESO’s Paranal Observatory in Chile. While stars in this galaxy are mostly old, the blue ring at the centre is ripe with stellar clusters full of young stars.
NGC 1386 -HST06419 02R791GB658n.png
Autor/Urheber: Fabian RRRR, Lizenz: CC BY-SA 3.0
Color rendering is done by by Aladin-software (2000A&AS..143...33B.)
NGC 1386 legacy dr10.jpg
Autor/Urheber: Legacy Surveys / D.Lang (Perimeter Institute) & Meli thev, Lizenz: CC BY-SA 4.0
NGC 1386 with Legacy Surveys DR10

Image Credit: Legacy Surveys / D. Lang (Perimeter Institute), NERSC

Filters: g, r, z

Download website: https://portal.nersc.gov/cfs/cosmo/data/legacysurvey/dr10/south/coadd/054/0540m360/

found via: https://www.legacysurvey.org/viewer?ra=54.1944&dec=-35.9979&layer=ls-dr10&zoom=13&bricks&ngc

I created this image with FITS-Files with SAO Image DS9 & Photoshop Elements