Celestial hemisphere:  Northern  ·  Constellation: Virgo (Vir)  ·  Contains:  13.79  ·  20 Vir  ·  740 Cantabia  ·  IC 3258  ·  IC 3280  ·  IC 3303  ·  IC 3305  ·  IC 3311  ·  IC 3331  ·  IC 3344  ·  IC 3349  ·  IC 3355  ·  IC 3356  ·  IC 3358  ·  IC 3363  ·  IC 3381  ·  IC 3382  ·  IC 3388  ·  IC 3393  ·  IC 3413  ·  IC 3416  ·  IC 3418  ·  IC 3427  ·  IC 3437  ·  IC 3443  ·  IC 3446  ·  IC 3457  ·  IC 3459  ·  IC 3461  ·  IC 3468  ·  And 65 more.
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Markarian's Chain and Friends, Matt Hughes
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Markarian's Chain and Friends

Getting plate-solving status, please wait...
Markarian's Chain and Friends, Matt Hughes
Powered byPixInsight

Markarian's Chain and Friends

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Description

This area is very low in the sky for me. I took this image over several nights over a few weeks. I only get about 3 hours a night above 30 degrees. This took ages to process as was not happy with contrast and colours. Sometimes only getting a 30 mins of data a night. Found it hard mixing all the different nights different frames. Lots of gradients. It is what it is.

Markarian's Chain is a stretch of galaxies that forms part of the Virgo Cluster. When viewed from Earth, the galaxies lie along a smoothly curved line. Charles Messier first discovered two of the galaxies, M84 and M86, in 1781. The other galaxies seen in the chain were discovered by William Herschel[1] and are now known primarily by their catalog numbers in John Louis Emil Dreyer's New General Catalogue, published in 1888.[2] It was ultimately named after the Armenian astrophysicist, Benjamin Markarian, who discovered their common motion in the early 1960s.[3] Member galaxies include M84 (NGC 4374), M86 (NGC 4406), NGC 4477, NGC 4473, NGC 4461, NGC 4458, NGC 4438 and NGC 4435

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Markarian's Chain and Friends, Matt Hughes