Celestial hemisphere:  Southern  ·  Constellation: Dorado (Dor)  ·  Contains:  NGC 1672
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NGC 1672, Terry Robison
NGC 1672
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NGC 1672

Getting plate-solving status, please wait...
NGC 1672, Terry Robison
NGC 1672
Powered byPixInsight

NGC 1672

Equipment

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Acquisition details

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Description

This wonderful barred spiral galaxy presents a fantastic face on orientation. It was originally thought to be a member of the Dorada Group, but its membership has been rescinded. Scanning across NGC 1672 it is possible to identify many starburst regions with red/pink hues. Incredible dust lanes extend away from the nucleus following the inner edges of spiral arms. Many clusters of hot young blue stars can be identified along the arms as well.

This galaxy is definitely an individual with its flamboyant broad arms and pale blue colouring. As you look towards the core, many dark lines and features are visible. It’s amazing that even a modest instrument of 250mm can resolve structures within a galaxy some 60 million years distant. It has an apparent size of 6.6 X 5.5 arcmin, and a brightness of magnitude 10.3.

NGC 1672 is also classified as a Seyfert galaxy. They are a subset of galaxies with active nuclei. Accretion of matter onto supermassive black holes creates incredible energy outputs and can outshine their host galaxies at times.

This image was created using Lum, Red, Green, Blue, and Ha filters.

Instruments:

10 Inch RCOS fl 9.1

Astro Physics AP-900 Mount

SBIG STL 11000m

FLI Filter Wheel

Astrodon Lum, Red, Green, Blue Filters

Baader Planetarium H-alpha 7nm Narrowband-Filter

Exposure Details:

37 X 900 Bin 1X1 Lum

16 X 450 Bin 2X2 Red

16 X 450 Bin 2X2 Green

16 X 450 Bin 2X2 Blue

12 X 900 Bin 1X1 Ha

Total time: 18.25 hours

Location

Australia, Central Victoria

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