Celestial hemisphere:  Northern  ·  Constellation: Andromeda (And)  ·  Contains:  NGC 801
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NGC 801, Gary Imm
NGC 801, Gary Imm

NGC 801

Getting plate-solving status, please wait...
NGC 801, Gary Imm
NGC 801, Gary Imm

NGC 801

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Description

This rarely imaged large spiral galaxy is located 170 million light years away in the constellation of Andromeda at a declination of +38 degrees.  It is a magnitude 13 galaxy which spans 4 arc-minutes in our apparent view.  This corresponds to a large diameter of 200,000 light years.

From our view perspective, the disk is inclined between 5 and 10 degrees from edge-on.  Despite the inclination, a number of dark dust lanes and star clouds are seen in the disk, as well as a glimpse of the spiral arms.

The small blue galaxy to the lower right at 4 o’clock is LEDA 2121791. I could not find distance to confirm whether this galaxy is a small companion.

This is the 945th and final image from my ASI 294 MM Pro camera.  Hats off to ZWO for another amazing product.  Served me well for the past 3 years and now my ASI 6200 cameras continue to do the same.

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