Celestial hemisphere:  Northern  ·  Constellation: Ursa Major (UMa)  ·  Contains:  HD103829  ·  M 109  ·  NGC 3992
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Messier 109 - Spiral Barred Galaxy in Ursa Major, Steven E Labkoff, MD
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Messier 109 - Spiral Barred Galaxy in Ursa Major

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Messier 109 - Spiral Barred Galaxy in Ursa Major, Steven E Labkoff, MD
Powered byPixInsight

Messier 109 - Spiral Barred Galaxy in Ursa Major

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Description

M109 - Multinight Shoot/processing

This shot of M109 is the combination of 30 shots at 120s with 17 shot at 180s over two different nights - April 12 and May 21. The sky on May 21 was pretty grungy to the south - all my frames of the Antennae Galaxies had to be tossed. But to the north, after midnight, things were a bit better.

Messier 109 was discovered by Pierre Méchain in 1781. Two years later Charles Messier catalogued the object, as an appended object to his publication.
Between the 1920s through the 1950s, it was considered that Messier objects over 103 were not official, but later the additions, further referred target objects from Méchain, became more widely accepted. David H. Levy mentions the modern 110 object catalog while Sir Patrick Moore places the limit at 104 objects but has M105 to 109 listed as addenda. By the late 1970s all 110 objects are commonly used among astronomers and remain so.
In March 1956 came M109's sole event-observed supernova, 1956A. It was a type Ia supernova in the south-east part of the galaxy, glowing at magnitude 12.8, reaching 12.3 at its maximum.

This galaxy is by far the most distant object in the Messier Catalog, followed by M91.
M109 has three satellite galaxies (UGC 6923, UGC 6940 and UGC 6969) and possibly more. Detailed hydrogen line observations have been obtained from M109 and its satellites. M109's H I (H one) distribution is regular with a low-level radial extension outside the stellar disc, while in the bar is a central H I hole in the gas distribution. Possibly the gas has been transported inwards by the bar, and because of the emptiness of the hole no large accretion events can have happened in the recent past.[5]
M109 is the brightest galaxy in the M109 Group, a large group of galaxies in the constellation Ursa Major that may number over 50.[6][7][8][9]
(from Wikipedia article on Messier M109 : [url=https://l.facebook.com/l.php?u=https%3A%2F%2Fen.wikipedia.org%2Fwiki%2FMessier_109%3Ffbclid%3DIwAR1Rmb-ZPV2uO5ooiJfDs3x1OsmfpBm5mTgTc8BBRACQFVY_U-fU-ZYFUmc&h=AT39OOFGmS-Vj8rKepjWuh4ohx-IM77wIdpy7lDX5RDYH6ABHXNdJ1CVYrX1X6Csh3WLEA3naFCKD21CjAfmclBUz_gblxbj2bUN_W9wlZfESkL76ITiIYFsqKO_ZmSLsSov_bY&__tn__=-UK-R&c[0]=AT0TdDUXc6uEV5P61UL7uZKXThoa6Og3ikH_GqDwrbM3o4lwdWoIM0kKmrurvQi3TrrKW-AKOu3yQJDAG9rxB4u6i_iCmPbeSRi8t23lLpQTfMfhiXg1rlx3XGe3l-5HnshmIBUPNmerJenSI3uI2cXm-qo]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Messier_109[/url]


Target: M109 - in the Big Dipper
Dates: April 12 and May 21, 2022
Lights: 30 @ 120s, 17@180s,
Darks: 30
Flats 40
Dark-Flats: 40
Bias: 135
Filter: L-Pro Light pollution filter
Telescope: Celestron 14" EdgeHD SCT
Guide Scope: 102mm Explorer Scientific APO refractor
Mount: Astrophysics 1200GTO
Integration Software: PixInsight "1.8.8.9-1"
Finishing Software: Lightroom and Photoshop

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Messier 109 - Spiral Barred Galaxy in Ursa Major, Steven E Labkoff, MD