Results for search term: ngc 3158
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NGC3158

The NGC 3158 group is composed of 8 NGC galaxies and many others a bit over 300 million light-years distant by redshift. NGC 3158 is a huge Elliptical galaxy whose gravity anchors the group. I get a size of 275,000 light-years for its outer reaches. It was discovered by William Herschel on March 17, 1787 and is in the second Herschel 400 object list.

Half the NGC members were found by Guillaume Bigourdan on February 1, 1886. He found NGC 3150, 52, 59 and 61, all in the southern part of the group. R.J. Mitchel working for the Earl of Rosse found two, NGC 3152 and 3160 with the last, NGC 3163 also found by William Herschel the same night as 3158. It, however, isn't in either Herschel 400 listing.

NGC 3159 is listed as an E2 spiral and as peculiar. That may be due to the very faint plume to the south. Ignoring the plume it is 67,000 light years across. The plume fades away so I'm hard-pressed to determine an edge but my best guesstimate puts it at least 200 arc seconds long making it over 300,000 light-years in size though of much lower mass than NGC 3158.

NGC 3160 is a strange spiral likely involved in a collision to create its odd structure. It is about 83,000 light-years across. NGC 3151 at 60,000 light-years is an SA0 Galaxy/ NGC 3152 is also rather odd being a ringed barred spiral with no arms, just the ring. NGC 3160 is a warped spiral seen edge on and is about 125,000 light-years wide. It appears, at least when seen edge-on, as a red spiral. Even the warped plumes off its ends are mostly red indicating no new star formation of any significance for millions of years. In fact, almost all members of the group appear to fall in the red and dead category.

NGC 3161, an E2 galaxy, is the smallest of the NGC galaxies in the group at only 57,000 light-years but does have an AGN core indicating it is still reacting to a likely interaction with another galaxy not too long in the past.

NGC 3163, Herschel's other discovery is quite large at a bit over 140,000 light-years and listed as an SA0-: galaxy rather than an elliptical.

NGC 3159, 3161 and 3163 appear to share a common halo indicating they may have had a close encounter with each other in the recent past. This may explain the large southern going plume coming from NGC 3159.

There are many other galaxies also likely members of the group. One without redshift data is east-southeast of NGC 3158, MCG +07-21-025. It isn't classified that I found and hard to observe as it is hiding behind a rather bright blue star. It makes it look like it is a red galaxy with a blue core.

The annotated image identifies all I found redshifts for. Only a few not members of the group. One star-like object is labeled RQ/G east-northeast of NGC 3158. RQ stands for Rejected Quasar. It apparently is just a very bright compact blue galaxy about 3.1 billion light-years distant. The Sloan image shows a slight blue disk around a bright nearly white core that is larger than a star of similar brightness. Likely it is some type of AGN, just not sufficient to be a quasar.

The minor planet center shows a periodic comet moving quite rapidly in the image but I see nothing at the position. It is 3.56 AU distant from us and 3.12 AU from the sun. One estimate puts it at 22.7 magnitude which would certainly be too faint at its speed and my lousy skies to have picked up.

Again this was a night of poor transparency though seeing was not good it was better than the previous night. Still, this image doesn't go as faint as it would under what used to be normal conditions here. The faint outer reaches of these galaxies is likely greater than I could see thanks to these less than optimum conditions.

I got one more blue image than normal because I thought one blue had been hurt beyond repair and so retook a blue image another night. Turned out I meant that comment for a different image so retook the wrong one. I used all three anyway.

14" LX200R @ f/10, L=5x10' RG=2x10' B=3x10', STL-11000XM, Paramount ME

Related Designations for NGC3158

NGC 3158, UGC 05511, CGCG 211-022, CGCG 1010.8+3901, MCG +07-21-020, 2MASX J10135049+3845536, 2MASXi J1013504+384553, 2MASS J10135052+3845536, SDSS J101350.51+384553.6, SDSS J101350.52+384553.6, WBL 258-004, LDCE 0716 NED002, HDCE 0570 NED002, USGC U288 NED11, ASK 340337.0, NSA 158013, NRGb 078.043, PGC 029822, UZC J101350.5+384553, FIRST J101350.4+384553, 1RXS J101352.5+384536, [BFW2006] J153.46050+38.76490 , Mr18:[BFW2006] 09736 NED07, Mr19:[BFW2006] 19935 NED05, Mr20:[BFW2006] 32030 NED02, [GMM2009] 0794570, [TTL2012] 011167, [DZ2015] 756-01, NGC 3150, CGCG 211-019, CGCG 1010.4+3855, MCG +07-21-017, 2MASX J10132629+3839273, 2MASXi J1013262+383927, 2MASS J10132633+3839277, SDSS J101326.31+383927.5, GALEXASC J101326.25+383929.4 , WBL 258-001, USGC U288 NED08, HOLM 170B, NSA 136817, NRGb 078.033, PGC 029789, UZC J101326.3+383927, NGC 3151, CGCG 211-020, CGCG 1010.5+3853, MCG +07-21-018, 2MASX J10132910+3837113, 2MASXi J1013290+383711, 2MASS J10132910+3837115, SDSS J101329.08+383711.4, GALEXASC J101329.20+383713.9 , WBL 258-002, LDCE 0716 NED001, HDCE 0570 NED001, USGC U288 NED07, ASK 340302.0, HOLM 170A, NSA 058937, NRGb 078.034, PGC 029796, UZC J101329.1+383711, [BFW2006] J153.37118+38.61983 , Mr18:[BFW2006] 09736 NED01, Mr19:[BFW2006] 19935 NED01, Mr20:[BFW2006] 32030 NED01, [TTL2012] 252620, [DZ2015] 756-05, NGC 3152, CGCG 211-021, CGCG 1010.6+3906, MCG +07-21-018a, 2MASX J10133414+3850355, 2MASXi J1013341+385035, 2MASS J10133412+3850356, SDSS J101334.11+385035.5, SDSS J101334.12+385035.5, GALEXASC J101334.23+385037.0 , WBL 258-003, USGC U288 NED12, ASK 340299.0, NSA 058936, NRGb 078.037, PGC 029805, UZC J101334.1+385035, [BFW2006] J153.39215+38.84320 , Mr18:[BFW2006] 09736 NED02, Mr19:[BFW2006] 19935 NED02, [TTL2012] 252617, [DZ2015] 759-03, NGC 3159, CGCG 211-023, CGCG 1010.9+3855, MCG +07-21-021, 2MASX J10135280+3839166, 2MASXi J1013528+383915, 2MASS J10135283+3839160, SDSS J101352.83+383916.0, SDSS J101352.83+383916.1, SDSS J101352.84+383916.1, GALEXASC J101352.82+383916.5 , WBL 258-005, LDCE 0716 NED003, HDCE 0570 NED003, USGC U288 NED10, ASK 340335.0, HOLM 172C, NPM1G +38.0190, NSA 158015, NRGb 078.044, PGC 029825, UZC J101352.8+383916, [BFW2006] J153.47013+38.65447 , Mr18:[BFW2006] 09736 NED08, Mr19:[BFW2006] 19935 NED06, Mr20:[BFW2006] 32030 NED03, [TTL2012] 011166, [DZ2015] 756-02, NGC 3160, UGC 05513, CGCG 211-024, CGCG 1010.9+3906, MCG +07-21-023, 2MFGC 07928, 2MASX J10135502+3850346, 2MASXi J1013550+385034, 2MASS J10135507+3850343, SDSS J101355.11+385034.5, SDSS J101355.12+385034.5, GALEXASC J101355.00+385037.0 , IRAS F10109+3905, WBL 258-006, LDCE 0716 NED004, HDCE 0570 NED004, USGC U288 NED01, ASK 340329.0, NSA 058946, NRGb 078.045, PGC 029830, UZC J101355.1+385034, FIRST J101355.0+385034, NVSS J101355+385034, CALIFA 319, [BFW2006] J153.47966+38.84293 , Mr18:[BFW2006] 09736 NED09, Mr19:[BFW2006] 19935 NED07, Mr20:[BFW2006] 32030 NED04, [SUV2010] 869, [MGD2014] 1010.9+3905, [TTL2012] 252645, [DZ2015] 756-03, NGC 3161, ARK 234, CGCG 211-025, CGCG 1011.0+3855, MCG +07-21-022, 2MASX J10135920+3839256, 2MASXi J1013592+383925, 2MASS J10135919+3839260, SDSS J101359.18+383925.9, SDSS J101359.19+383925.9, WBL 258-007, USGC U288 NED06, HOLM 172A, NPM1G +38.0191, NSA 058948, NRGb 078.047, PGC 029837, SSTSL2 J101359.14+383925.4, UZC J101359.2+383926, FIRST J101359.2+383925, [BFW2006] J153.49662+38.65720 , Mr18:[BFW2006] 09736 NED10, Mr19:[BFW2006] 19935 NED08, [TTL2012] 252646, [DZ2015] 759-02, NGC 3163, UGC 05517, CGCG 211-027, CGCG 1011.1+3855, MCG +07-21-026, 2MASX J10140714+3839096, 2MASXi J1014071+383909, 2MASS J10140712+3839092, SDSS J101407.10+383909.1, GALEXASC J101407.28+383910.0 , WBL 258-008, USGC U288 NED09, HOLM 172B, NSA 136869, NRGb 078.048, PGC 029846, SSTSL2 J101407.07+383908.8, UZC J101407.1+383909, [GMM2009] 0812816, [DZ2015] 759-01, NGC3158, NGC3150, NGC3151, NGC3152, NGC3159, NGC3160, NGC3161, NGC3163, ECO 07891, [PJY2015] 588016892785590288 , ECO 07858, ECO 07869, ECO 07880, ECO 07902, ECO 07913, ECO 07935, ECO 07957,


NGC3158L5X10RG2X10B3X10.JPG


NGC3158L5X10RG2X10B3X10ID.JPG