NGC 196

Galaxie
NGC 196
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Aufnahme des Hubble-Weltraumteleskops von NGC 196 (o.r), 197 (Mitte) und 192 (u.l.)
AladinLite
SternbildWalfisch
Position
ÄquinoktiumJ2000.0, Epoche: J2000.0
Rektaszension00h 39m 17,8s[1]
Deklination+00° 54′ 46″[1]
Erscheinungsbild
Morphologischer TypSB0 / pec:[1]
Helligkeit (visuell)13,6 mag[2]
Helligkeit (B-Band)14,6 mag[2]
Winkel­ausdehnung1.3′ × 0.8′[2]
Positionswinkel[2]
Flächen­helligkeit13,5 mag/arcmin²[2]
Physikalische Daten
ZugehörigkeitHCG 7
WBL 15
NGC 173-Gruppe
NGC 192-Gruppe
LGG 10[1][3]
Rotverschiebung0,014140 ± 0,000003[1]
Radial­geschwin­digkeit(4239 ± 1) km/s[1]
Hubbledistanz
H0 = 73 km/(s • Mpc)
(193 ± 14) · 106 Lj
(59,3 ± 4,2) Mpc [1]
Durchmesser75.000 Lj[4]
Geschichte
EntdeckungWilhelm Herschel
Entdeckungsdatum28. Dezember 1790
Katalogbezeichnungen
NGC 196 • UGC 405 • PGC 2357 • CGCG 383-053 NED01 • MCG +00-02-110 • 2MASX J00391786+0054458 • HCG 7B • VV 433 • GC 100 • H II 860 • h 41 • GALEXASC J003917.69+005445.9 • LDCE 0034 NED005

NGC 196 ist eine linsenförmige Galaxie vom Hubble-Typ SB0 im Sternbild Walfisch südlich der Ekliptik. Sie ist schätzungsweise 193 Millionen Lichtjahre von der Milchstraße entfernt und hat einen Durchmesser von etwa 75.000 Lichtjahren. Gemeinsam mit NGC 173, NGC 192, NGC 197, NGC 201 und NGC 237 bildet sie die Hickson-Kompaktgruppe HCG 7 oder NGC 192-Gruppe.

Das Objekt wurde am 28. Dezember 1790 von dem deutsch-britischen Astronomen Wilhelm Herschel entdeckt.[5]

Weblinks

Commons: NGC 196 – 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 196
  3. VizieR
  4. NASA/IPAC
  5. Seligman

Auf dieser Seite verwendete Medien

HCG 7.jpg
Autor/Urheber: ESA/Hubble & NASA, Lizenz: CC BY 3.0
The NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope has imaged part of the Hickson Compact Group 7, or HCG 7 for short. This grouping is composed of one lenticular (lens-shaped) and three spiral galaxies in close proximity. In this image, one of the spirals dominates the foreground, with many more distant galaxies peppering the background. Observing tightly-knit galaxy groups like HCG 7 is important because they evolve in a different way from their more spaced-out counterparts in less crowded regions of the Universe.

A recent study using Hubble data analysed the star clusters in HCG 7. Three hundred young clusters and 150 globular clusters were charted, and their ages and distributions measured. The results suggest that the rate of star formation has been fairly steady through time, although quite high in the central regions. Additional studies, including searches for material between the galaxies, hint that the stars in the HCG 7 galaxies formed by converting their gas without any gravitational influences caused by merging with other galaxies. This is puzzling, as the galaxies are depleting their supplies of gas at a rate that suggests that they have merged in the past.

This raises the question of whether the group really has evolved serenely, or if there are mysterious processes at work that are yet to be understood. The currently known information is contradictory and an encouragement for further studies to discover the real story behind HCG 7.

This picture was created from images taken with the Wide Field Channel of the Advanced Camera for Surveys. Images through a blue filter (F435W, coloured blue), yellow-orange (F606W, coloured green) and near-infrared (F814W, coloured red) filters were combined. The total exposure times were 1710 s, 1230 s and 1065 s per filter, respectively, and the field of view is 3.3 x 3.0 arcminutes.