![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Arp 68/NGC 7756 is a Sc spiral galaxy in Pisces at about 120 million
light-years. Arp included it in his category Sprial Galaxies with small high surface brightness companions on arms. I'd have put it in his heavy arm category as the "companion" appears to be in the distant background. Arp said the companion was NGC 7756. Lord Rosse who discovered NGC 7756 and NGC 7757 said this about NGC 7756 "Another neb about 5' sp (NGC 7757)." By "sp" he means south preceeding which is south west. The only object 5' south west of NGC 7757 is a 12.8 magnitude rather white star. His description is a a match for NGC 7757. No one doubts this is a double sighting of NGC 7757. The problem is some sources, like Arp, claim the companion is NGC 7756. This obviously isn't the case. The Kanipe-Webb book gets it right as does NED and the NGC Project. But what is the designation of the companion? It doesn't seem to have one, at least in NED! NED does list an HII region within a couple seconds of arc of its position however. I can't see it against the distant galaxy. In fact most of the fuzzy objects in my image don't have any catalog entry that NED shows. Within 15' radius of Arp 68 NED lists only 6 other galaxies, one one of which has a red shift listed. You'll find this galaxy due east (left) of Arp 68 just above a rather bright star. It is the X-ray galaxy GALEX 2690243303817875752 also at 120 million light-years. The very blue galaxy just below Arp 68 and a tad to the east of its center is [HDL96] 407-017. I have nothing much on it. Most sources consider the companion just a coincidence of line of sight that isn't related to Arp 68 in any way. It shows no sign of interaction though NGC 7757 does seem somewhat disturbed. Arp noted the arm saying "Many star-like knots lined up along straight arm." If it has interacted with anything recently the only candidate appears to be the other one at 120 million light years. Being an X-ray galaxy it has apparently been fired up. But there's no real evidence the two ever interacted. A better candidate might be be NGC 7750 about 39 minutes southwest of Arp 68 so well out of my image. It also is about 120 million light years distant and is classed as (R')SB(rs)c pec:. They are too far apart for one frame but I wish I'd realized it was there last fall. I'll try for it this fall weather willing. The image has quite a few asteroids in it. What's really annoying to me is that THREE of them are unknown to the Minor Planet Center. Unfortunately, I took this back last September and just recently found the asteroids so there's no way to follow up. They are still lost awaiting discovery it seems. I've "found" about 8 now that I've seen months too late to follow up on. This is getting to be routine with me it seems. I've included an annotated image that shows that identifies the asteroids. (91197) 1998 SD115 magnitude 18.3 2002 PY124 magnitude 19.2 2005 SZ152 magnitude 19.7 3 unknowns This field is out of the Sloan survey area so there's very little data available and no professional images, other than Arp's, that I could find on the net. Arp's image http://nedwww.ipac.caltech.edu/level...big_arp68.jpeg His image appears to have a plate defect at the southwest end of the companion (right in his photo). It appears to be a round stain of some sort. Rick -- Correct domain name is arvig and it is net not com. Prefix is correct. Third character is a zero rather than a capital "Oh". |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Forgot exposure data:
14" LX200R @ f/10, L=4x10' RGB=2x10'x3, STL-11000XM, Paramount ME Rick -- Correct domain name is arvig and it is net not com. Prefix is correct. Third character is a zero rather than a capital "Oh". |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Added to my list to image.
I love those Pec galaxies. On Sun, 18 Jul 2010 01:05:09 -0500, Rick Johnson wrote: Arp 68/NGC 7756 is a Sc spiral galaxy in Pisces at about 120 million light-years. Arp included it in his category Sprial Galaxies with small high surface brightness companions on arms. I'd have put it in his heavy arm category as the "companion" appears to be in the distant background. Arp said the companion was NGC 7756. Lord Rosse who discovered NGC 7756 and NGC 7757 said this about NGC 7756 "Another neb about 5' sp (NGC 7757)." By "sp" he means south preceeding which is south west. The only object 5' south west of NGC 7757 is a 12.8 magnitude rather white star. His description is a a match for NGC 7757. No one doubts this is a double sighting of NGC 7757. The problem is some sources, like Arp, claim the companion is NGC 7756. This obviously isn't the case. The Kanipe-Webb book gets it right as does NED and the NGC Project. But what is the designation of the companion? It doesn't seem to have one, at least in NED! NED does list an HII region within a couple seconds of arc of its position however. I can't see it against the distant galaxy. In fact most of the fuzzy objects in my image don't have any catalog entry that NED shows. Within 15' radius of Arp 68 NED lists only 6 other galaxies, one one of which has a red shift listed. You'll find this galaxy due east (left) of Arp 68 just above a rather bright star. It is the X-ray galaxy GALEX 2690243303817875752 also at 120 million light-years. The very blue galaxy just below Arp 68 and a tad to the east of its center is [HDL96] 407-017. I have nothing much on it. Most sources consider the companion just a coincidence of line of sight that isn't related to Arp 68 in any way. It shows no sign of interaction though NGC 7757 does seem somewhat disturbed. Arp noted the arm saying "Many star-like knots lined up along straight arm." If it has interacted with anything recently the only candidate appears to be the other one at 120 million light years. Being an X-ray galaxy it has apparently been fired up. But there's no real evidence the two ever interacted. A better candidate might be be NGC 7750 about 39 minutes southwest of Arp 68 so well out of my image. It also is about 120 million light years distant and is classed as (R')SB(rs)c pec:. They are too far apart for one frame but I wish I'd realized it was there last fall. I'll try for it this fall weather willing. The image has quite a few asteroids in it. What's really annoying to me is that THREE of them are unknown to the Minor Planet Center. Unfortunately, I took this back last September and just recently found the asteroids so there's no way to follow up. They are still lost awaiting discovery it seems. I've "found" about 8 now that I've seen months too late to follow up on. This is getting to be routine with me it seems. I've included an annotated image that shows that identifies the asteroids. (91197) 1998 SD115 magnitude 18.3 2002 PY124 magnitude 19.2 2005 SZ152 magnitude 19.7 3 unknowns This field is out of the Sloan survey area so there's very little data available and no professional images, other than Arp's, that I could find on the net. Arp's image http://nedwww.ipac.caltech.edu/level...big_arp68.jpeg His image appears to have a plate defect at the southwest end of the companion (right in his photo). It appears to be a round stain of some sort. Rick |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Rick,
amazing detail in this smallish galaxy. Stefan "Rick Johnson" schrieb im Newsbeitrag . com... Arp 68/NGC 7756 is a Sc spiral galaxy in Pisces at about 120 million light-years. Arp included it in his category Sprial Galaxies with small high surface brightness companions on arms. I'd have put it in his heavy arm category as the "companion" appears to be in the distant background. Arp said the companion was NGC 7756. Lord Rosse who discovered NGC 7756 and NGC 7757 said this about NGC 7756 "Another neb about 5' sp (NGC 7757)." By "sp" he means south preceeding which is south west. The only object 5' south west of NGC 7757 is a 12.8 magnitude rather white star. His description is a a match for NGC 7757. No one doubts this is a double sighting of NGC 7757. The problem is some sources, like Arp, claim the companion is NGC 7756. This obviously isn't the case. The Kanipe-Webb book gets it right as does NED and the NGC Project. But what is the designation of the companion? It doesn't seem to have one, at least in NED! NED does list an HII region within a couple seconds of arc of its position however. I can't see it against the distant galaxy. In fact most of the fuzzy objects in my image don't have any catalog entry that NED shows. Within 15' radius of Arp 68 NED lists only 6 other galaxies, one one of which has a red shift listed. You'll find this galaxy due east (left) of Arp 68 just above a rather bright star. It is the X-ray galaxy GALEX 2690243303817875752 also at 120 million light-years. The very blue galaxy just below Arp 68 and a tad to the east of its center is [HDL96] 407-017. I have nothing much on it. Most sources consider the companion just a coincidence of line of sight that isn't related to Arp 68 in any way. It shows no sign of interaction though NGC 7757 does seem somewhat disturbed. Arp noted the arm saying "Many star-like knots lined up along straight arm." If it has interacted with anything recently the only candidate appears to be the other one at 120 million light years. Being an X-ray galaxy it has apparently been fired up. But there's no real evidence the two ever interacted. A better candidate might be be NGC 7750 about 39 minutes southwest of Arp 68 so well out of my image. It also is about 120 million light years distant and is classed as (R')SB(rs)c pec:. They are too far apart for one frame but I wish I'd realized it was there last fall. I'll try for it this fall weather willing. The image has quite a few asteroids in it. What's really annoying to me is that THREE of them are unknown to the Minor Planet Center. Unfortunately, I took this back last September and just recently found the asteroids so there's no way to follow up. They are still lost awaiting discovery it seems. I've "found" about 8 now that I've seen months too late to follow up on. This is getting to be routine with me it seems. I've included an annotated image that shows that identifies the asteroids. (91197) 1998 SD115 magnitude 18.3 2002 PY124 magnitude 19.2 2005 SZ152 magnitude 19.7 3 unknowns This field is out of the Sloan survey area so there's very little data available and no professional images, other than Arp's, that I could find on the net. Arp's image http://nedwww.ipac.caltech.edu/level...big_arp68.jpeg His image appears to have a plate defect at the southwest end of the companion (right in his photo). It appears to be a round stain of some sort. Rick -- Correct domain name is arvig and it is net not com. Prefix is correct. Third character is a zero rather than a capital "Oh". |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
ASTRO: Arp 165 A weird faint fuzzy | Rick Johnson[_2_] | Astro Pictures | 2 | June 20th 09 01:22 PM |
ASTRO: Arp 112 A trio of weird galaxies | Rick Johnson[_2_] | Astro Pictures | 1 | April 21st 09 11:27 AM |
ASTRO: NGC 3656 A VERY weird galaxy ARP 155 | Rick Johnson[_3_] | Astro Pictures | 5 | March 14th 08 04:55 PM |
Are You Weird? | Michael Baldwin, Bruce | Misc | 8 | March 21st 06 07:37 PM |
I'm so weird | Starstuffed | Amateur Astronomy | 23 | October 21st 03 11:39 AM |