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IC 1551 An orderly galaxy collision and merger?



 
 
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Old April 23rd 15, 05:39 AM
WA0CKY WA0CKY is offline
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Default IC 1551 An orderly galaxy collision and merger?

IC 1551 makes the previous posts galaxy NGC 765, at 250,000 light-years seem a dwarf. IC 1551, located in Pisces at a distance of some 570,000 million light-years is 421,000 light-years end to end thanks to its huge plume like arms. In fact they are likely plumes. The core has two major orange parts and a smaller one as well as a complex blue object. The latter seems made of at least two star groups, one on the west much larger than the one on the east. All this would seem to indicate we have a major smashup in progress here with the cores "close" to merging. Unfortunately it hasn't attracted the interest of any major scope so what is going on here is just my speculation that fits what we see.

While it isn't seen in the processed image the luminance FITS show hints the the southern arm turns back north in what from our perspective is a nearly straight north path. I suspect it highly curved and increasing its distance from the core. It's just that our perspective distorts it greatly. This would make a great object for those putting many hours into an image to bring out faint plumes like this galaxy appears to have.

Like the last post this is a very lonely galaxy which makes the smashup idea a bit surprising. Still I think it the best explanation for its appearance. At least until major scopes take an interest. I wonder if it represents what the Antenna Galaxies (Arp 244) will look like in a hundred million years.

Due to a programming error I got only one blue frame the night I took this image. I had to return on an inferior night to get a second blue frame. Since the night was poor I took two so ended up with 3 blue frames but only 2 for the other colors.

One other note. Normally when I calculate the size of a galaxy I just use the red shift distance. While the universe did expand some causing the light travel time to be greater than the distance at the time the light left it, this difference is usually immaterial. In this image it is starting to get material. If I'd have used the light travel time distance its size would have been about 8,000 light-years greater than I state since I used the angular size distance which estimates its distance when the light left that we see. Time doesn't shrink the image, just reddens and dims it slightly so we see it at the angular size it was when the light left it when it was closer to us than the light travel time indicates. Applying that size to the light travel time distance makes it appear larger than it really is. An issue I've never felt it necessary to compensate for before.

14" LX200R @ f/10, L=4x10' RG=2x10' B=3x10', STL-11000XM, Paramount ME

Rick
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