NGC 7038
Galaxie NGC 7038 | |
---|---|
(c) Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA, D. Jones Acknowledgement: G. Anand, L. Shatz, CC BY 4.0 | |
Aufnahme mittels Hubble-Weltraumteleskop | |
AladinLite | |
Sternbild | Indus |
Position Äquinoktium: J2000.0, Epoche: J2000.0 | |
Rektaszension | 21h 15m 07,51s[1] |
Deklination | -47° 13′ 13,8″[1] |
Erscheinungsbild | |
Morphologischer Typ | SA(s)c[1] |
Helligkeit (visuell) | 12,0 mag[2] |
Helligkeit (B-Band) | 12,7 mag[2] |
Winkelausdehnung | 3,1' × 1,4'[2] |
Positionswinkel | 127°[2] |
Flächenhelligkeit | 13,4 mag/arcmin²[2] |
Physikalische Daten | |
Zugehörigkeit | SSRS Gruppe 29 NGC 7038-Gruppe LGG 441[1][3] |
Rotverschiebung | 0,016471 ± 0,000023[1] |
Radialgeschwindigkeit | (4938 ± 7) km/s[1] |
Hubbledistanz vrad / H0 | (220 ± 15) · 106 Lj (67,4 ± 4,7) Mpc [1] |
Geschichte | |
Entdeckung | John Herschel |
Entdeckungsdatum | 30. September 1834 |
Katalogbezeichnungen | |
NGC 7038 • PGC 66414 • ESO 286-079 • IRAS 21117-4725 • 2MASX J21150752-4713139 • SGC 211146-4725.7 • AM 2111-472 • 2MASS J21150748-4713137 • HIPASS J2115-47 • LDCE 1438 NED015 • WISEA J211507.49-471313.6 |
NGC 7038 ist eine Balken-Spiralgalaxie vom Hubble-Typ SBc im Sternbild Indianer am Südsternhimmel. Sie ist schätzungsweise 220 Millionen Lichtjahre von der Milchstraße entfernt und hat einen Durchmesser von etwa 205.000 Lichtjahren. Sie ist das hellste Mitglied der NGC 7038-Gruppe (LGG 441).
Die Supernovae SN 1983L (Typ Ia) und SN 2010dx (Typ II) wurden hier beobachtet.[4][5]
Das Objekt wurde am 30. September 1834 von John Herschel entdeckt.[6]
NGC 7038-Gruppe (LGG 441)
Galaxie | Alternativname | Entfernung/Mio. Lj |
---|---|---|
NGC 6970 | PGC 65608 | 234 |
NGC 6987 | PGC 65807 | 233 |
NGC 7014 | PGC 66153 | 216 |
NGC 7038 | PGC 66414 | 220 |
PGC 65997 | ESO 235-042 | 220 |
PGC 66032 | ESO 235-047 | 220 |
PGC 66041 | ESO 235-049 | 232 |
PGC 66049 | ESO 286-037 | 216 |
PGC 66064 | ESO 235-053 | 229 |
PGC 66072 | ESO 286-042 | 354 (!) |
PGC 66088 | ESO 235-055 | 223 |
PGC 66101 | ESO 235-057 | 229 |
PGC 66117 | ESO 286-049 | 236 |
Siehe auch
- PGC 66421 (NGC 7038A)
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(c) Credit:
ESA/Hubble & NASA, D. Jones
Acknowledgement: G. Anand, L. Shatz, CC BY 4.0Investigating A Made-to-Measure Galaxy
The spiral arms of the galaxy NGC 7038 wind languidly across this image from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope. NGC 7038 lies around 220 million light-years from Earth in the southern constellation Indus. This image portrays an especially rich and detailed view of a spiral galaxy, and exposes a huge number of distant stars and galaxies around it. That’s because it’s made from a combined 15 hours worth of Hubble time focused on NGC 7038 and collecting light. So much data indicates that this is a valuable target, and indeed, NGC 7038 has been particularly helpful to astronomers measuring distances at vast cosmic scales.
The distances to astronomical objects are determined using an interconnected chain of measurement techniques called the Cosmic Distance Ladder. Each rung in the ladder is calibrated by earlier steps, based on measurements of objects closer to us. This makes the accuracy of distances at the largest scales dependent on how accurately distances to nearby objects can be determined. Hubble inspected NGC 7038 with its Wide Field Camera 3 to calibrate two of the most common distance measurement techniques: type 1A supernovae and Cepheid variables.
One of Hubble's original science goals was to accurately establish distances to night-sky objects, and over its three decades of operation Hubble’s increasingly precise distance measurements have contributed to one of the most intriguing unsolved problems in astronomy. Distance measurements are used to derive a quantity known as the Hubble constant, which captures how fast the Universe is expanding. As astronomer’s measurements of the Hubble constant have become more precise, their value has become increasingly inconsistent with the value of the Hubble Constant derived from observations of the Big Bang’s afterglow. Astronomers have been unable to explain the mismatch between the two values of the Hubble constant, which suggests that a new discovery in cosmology is waiting to be made.
[Image description: An enormous spiral galaxy fills half of the frame, in the centre. It is oval-shaped, with four blue spiral arms winding around it. The galaxy’s centre shines brightly with pale yellow light. Thin strands of orange dust are spread around the centre, following the paths of the arms. Above and below the galaxy, very many small stars and galaxies are visible on the black background.]
Credit:
ESA/Hubble & NASA, D. Jones Acknowledgement: G. Anand, L. Shatz
Coordinates Position (RA): 11 46 40.80 Position (Dec): -3° 51' 9.14" Field of view: 3.02 x 3.34 arcminutes Orientation: North is 33.3° right of vertical
Colours & filters Band Wavelength Telescope Optical G 474 nm Víctor M. Blanco 4-meter Telescope DECam Optical R 644 nm Víctor M. Blanco 4-meter Telescope DECam Optical Z 919 nm Víctor M. Blanco 4-meter Telescope DECam Optical V 606 nm Hubble Space Telescope ACS.