Celestial hemisphere:  Northern  ·  Constellation: Pegasus (Peg)  ·  Contains:  NGC 7303
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NGC 7303, Gary Imm
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NGC 7303

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NGC 7303, Gary Imm
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NGC 7303

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Description

This object is a barred spiral galaxy located 150 million light years away in the constellation of Pegasus at a declination of +31 degrees. The galaxy spans 1.7 arc-minutes in our apparent view, which corresponds to a diameter of 75,000 light years. This is the first image of this object on Astrobin.

Very little has been written on this object. I found it scanning through SIMBAD and I really was intrigued by its structure, which is unlike any other galaxy that I have imaged. The galaxy looks severely disturbed but no companion is in sight. It looks like a barred core is offset way to the top of the disk, surrounded by fragments of what may have been arms at some point. Dust lanes are visible in the top half of the disk, while the bottom half looks nondescript. No extended star streams are seen, which might be expected if another galaxy had approached in recent time.

NGC 7304, identified on the Astrobin mouseover, is a non-existent NGC object.

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