IC 239

At a distance of 30-40 million light years IC 239 is not terribly distant. However, its low (surface) brightness may indicate that this galaxy isn't as massive as many others of the same type (M101 for example). The bright foreground stars of our own galaxy make detecting the delicate structure of this face-on spiral a difficult venture. There are hints of bluish spiral arms with a myriad of pink nebulae (star forming regions). If we lived in this galaxy, our sun would orbit the galactic center at a speed of 280km/s. This is a bit faster than our speed in the Milky Way at around 220km/s.

This image was taken as part of Advanced Observing Program (AOP) program at Kitt Peak Visitor Center during 2014.

Créditos:

KPNO/NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/Sharon Kempton and Karen Brister/Adam Block

About the Image

Id:noao-ic239kempton
Tipo:Observation
Release date:19 de Febrero de 2014 a las 09:34
Size:1359 x 943 px

Sobre el Objeto

Nombre:IC 239
Constellation:Andromeda
Categoría:Galaxies

Formatos de Imágenes

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321,1 KB
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167,9 KB

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Coordenadas

ObjectValue
Posición (AR):2 36 35.10
Posición (Dec):39° 2' 9.96"
Campo visual:11.69 x 8.11 arcminutes
Orientación:North is 93.7° right of vertical


Colores y Filtros

BandaLongitud de OndaTelescopio
Optical
B
438 nmVisitor Center 0.5-meter Telescope
Other CCD
Optical
G
475 nmVisitor Center 0.5-meter Telescope
Other CCD
Optical
R
625 nmVisitor Center 0.5-meter Telescope
Other CCD
Optical
Broad Band
555 nmVisitor Center 0.5-meter Telescope
Other CCD