Celestial hemisphere:  Northern  ·  Constellation: Draco (Dra)  ·  Contains:  NGC 6829  ·  NGC 6831
Getting plate-solving status, please wait...
NGC 6829 & NGC 6831, Gary Imm
Powered byPixInsight

NGC 6829 & NGC 6831

Getting plate-solving status, please wait...
NGC 6829 & NGC 6831, Gary Imm
Powered byPixInsight

NGC 6829 & NGC 6831

Equipment

Loading...

Acquisition details

Loading...

Description

This image captures a pair of galaxies located 150 million light years away in the constellation of Draco at a declination of +60 degrees. The right galaxy is NGC 6829 and the left galaxy is NGC 6831. Each galaxy has an actual diameter of about 90,000 light years. Both galaxies have interesting structures, which may be a sign that they are interacting.

NGC 6829 is a nearly edge-on spiral. The disk is distorted at each end. The central dust lane is fascinating – above the core it looks fairly normal, but below the core it splits like a tuning fork. Several bright areas are visible along mid-axis, including an orange core. These looks like galaxy features to me and not superimposed Milky Way stars.

NGC 6831 is even more fascinating. It is an elliptical galaxy with a mid-region ring structure. It is odd in that the galaxy extends further to the upper right beyond the ring, but to the lower left it pretty much stops at the ring.

Comments