Celestial hemisphere:  Northern  ·  Constellation: Virgo (Vir)  ·  Contains:  IC 3258  ·  IC 3311  ·  M 84  ·  M 86  ·  NGC 4374  ·  NGC 4387  ·  NGC 4388  ·  NGC 4402  ·  NGC 4406  ·  NGC 4407  ·  NGC 4425  ·  NGC 4435  ·  NGC 4438  ·  NGC 4458  ·  NGC 4461
MARKARIAN CHAIN, Emanuele La Barbera
MARKARIAN CHAIN
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MARKARIAN CHAIN

MARKARIAN CHAIN, Emanuele La Barbera
MARKARIAN CHAIN
Powered byPixInsight

MARKARIAN CHAIN

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Description

The Markarian chain is a group of galaxies that is part of the Virgo cluster of galaxies, one of the closest to the Local Group of which the Milky Way is part.
The average distance of these objects is 60 million light years and there are up to 1500 components. Viewed from Earth, galaxies lie along a gently curved line that extends.
Charles Messier first discovered two of the galaxies in the chain, named M84 and M86, in his famous catalog. These are the two brightest and angularly extended galaxies in the photograph.
This chain was named after astrophysicist Benjamin Markarian, who discovered their common motion in the early 1960s.
In this portion of the sky there are so many galaxies, of the most varied types and shapes that a taxonomy study could be made. The types in fact range from the barred spiral, to the lenticular and even to the irregular ones.
Clusters of galaxies are among the most fascinating objects in the universe. Although they can be difficult targets for amateur telescopes, it is nevertheless very fascinating to observe the myriad of extragalactic objects that compose it in a given portion of the sky. Clusters of galaxies, together with super clusters, constitute the great structures of the universe, as well as the so-called cosmic web, the cosmic web. It is these megastructures that make up the universe on a grand scale.
The image is obtained with the LRGB method with my friend Salvo Semilia.

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