Celestial hemisphere:  Northern  ·  Constellation: Pegasus (Peg)  ·  Contains:  NGC 7315  ·  NGC 7318  ·  NGC 7319  ·  NGC 7320  ·  NGC 7331
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NGC 7331 and Quintet, Armin Unterwandling
NGC 7331 and Quintet
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NGC 7331 and Quintet

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NGC 7331 and Quintet, Armin Unterwandling
NGC 7331 and Quintet
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NGC 7331 and Quintet

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Description

In 1877, the French astronomer E.M. Stephan visually with the 40cm refracting telescope of the Observatory of Marseilles, discoverd a small, dense group of galaxies. This remarkable system, now known as Stephan`s Quintet consists of  five galaxies which apper so close together that their images overlap. Many of the galaxies are extraordinary in themselves, showing signs of violent interaction, including highly distorted shapes, and long filaments of stars and gas extending far from the body of the galaxy. 
In 1961 Geoffrey and Magaret Burbidge obtained spectra of the galaxies in Stefan`s Quintet. Their observations revealed that all but one of the galaxies are recending from the earth at about the same velocity. The discordant galaxy is receding less rapidly.
Two possible explanations were advanced for this phenomenon. The first, called the Projection Hypothesis, argues that the discordant galaxy does not belong to the group, but is simply a foreground or background galaxy that happens to lie along the line of sight to the group. The difference in velocity between the discrdant galaxy and the  other members of the group is, then, just a result of the difference in distances.
The alternative explanation, preferred by a few astronomers, is that the discordant galaxies are true members of their groups, but have a different velocity either because they are moving very rapidly, or because of some as-yet unidentified phenomenon. At present there are no observations wichconclusively rule out one or the other explanation.
in the case of Stepan`s Quintet, the discordant galaxy is NGC 7320. Its lumpy appearance is consistent wiht the idea that it is much closer than the other members. Also, its 'red shift' is about the same as that of the nearby spiral galaxy NGC 7331, and its neighbors. Most astronomers believe that NGC 7320 is a foreground object that is actually of the NGC 7331 group.

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  • NGC 7331 and Quintet, Armin Unterwandling
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NGC 7331 and Quintet, Armin Unterwandling