Messier 91. NGC 4548

Click on the image for a full resolution version

See this image also on Instagram

 

Messier 91, NGC 4548, is a very faint barred spiral galaxy located 63 million light years away in the constellation Coma Berenices. It is considered to be an “anemic” galaxy, because of the very low rate of star formation. The reason behind this fact is that M91 is very poor in neutral Hydrogen gas (HI) as a consequence of the so called “ram-pressure” that strips the existing gas in the galaxy as it moves through the galactic medium. This is the same phenomenon that happens to M90. Messier 91 was one of the “missing” Messier objects for a long time. It was in 1969 that an amateur astronomer, W. C. Williams, noticed that Messier had made a mistake when logging M91’s coordinates: he noted the differences in RA and Dec with M89, but when writing the final coordinates, he used M58 as a reference. Once corrected the error, M91 was easily identified with NGC 4548.

 

Additional Information

Object

Name(s): Messier 91. M91. NGC 4548

Type: Barred Spiral Galaxy

RA:  12h 35m 25s

Dec: +14º 29’ 53”

Constellation: Coma Berenices

Size (arcmin): 5.5×4.5 arcmin

Magnitude: +11.0

Distance: 63 Mly

Image

Date: 2022-04-07 to 2022-04-22

Location: Curiosity2 Observatory, New Mexico Skies, Mayhill, NM, USA

Size (arcmin): 22×22 arcmin

Telescope: 24” (61 cm) f/6.5 Reflector

Camera: FLI PL16803 (4096x4096pix)

Guiding: Astrodon MonsterMOAG off-axis guider

Total exposure: 12 hours (L: 3h; RGB: 9h)

Processing: CCDStack, Photoshop CC 2022

error: Content is protected !!