There is a region in the sky where a significant number (the vast majority actually) of galaxies congregate. As the Earth swings around its orbit in the spring, it faces the plane of the our own Milky Way but at night it faces a part of the sky that reveals what some of us call the Realm of the Galaxies. During the months of April, May and June, several hundred of these galaxies become easy to image with telescopes of 10 inches aperture or more. And, with just a little extra effort, up to thousands can be imaged but will appear rather small as they are much farther distant.
Most of these galaxies are clustered around the constellation Leo the Lion and just beyond Leo's tail. This cluster, some 4,500 or more of them, is known as the Coma-Virgo Cluster and lies about 60 million light years away. This enormous distance is why these galaxies are so faint. Some of these galaxies are larger and brighter than our Milky Way galaxy but still hard to see.
Sombrero Galaxy - May 11, 2023 EdgeHD11 Telescope / ASI533mc camera 58x120sec subs thru UV/IR cut filter |
The photo displayed here is the Sombrero Galaxy (one of the Messier objects, M104, and also designated as NGC 4594). It lies 31.1 million light years from the Milky Way and is slightly larger in size at about 94,900 light years in diameter (the Milky Way is estimated to have a diameter of 87,400 light years). Because of it's large distance from us it appears in the sky to be only 9' x4' (the ' is a minute of arc which is 1/60 of a degree, making the size about 0.15 degree in the long dimension). It has a very bright nucleus, and a rather large central bulge (which is unusual for galaxies). In addition it sports a prominent dust lane in its outer disk, which is viewed almost edge-on. It is the dark dust lane and the bulge that give it the appearance of a sombrero hat (thus the name).
More details about my image of the Sombrero can be found on AstroBin.
No comments:
Post a Comment