NGC 1550

Lenticular galaxy in the constellation Taurus From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

NGC 1550 is a lenticular galaxy located in the constellation Taurus. NGC 1550 was discovered by the German-British astronomer William Herschel in 1785.[3] NGC 1550 was also observed by the Prussian astronomer Heinrich d'Arrest on December 29, 1861 and was added to the New General Catalogue under the designation NGC 1551.[3]

Quick facts Observation data, Constellation ...
NGC 1550
The lenticular galaxy NGC 1550
Observation data
ConstellationTaurus
Right ascension04/19/37.9[1]
Declination02/24/34[1]
Redshift0.012403 ± 0.000058[1]
Heliocentric radial velocity3,718 ± 17[1]
Distance174,754 ± 12,263 kly (53,580,000 ± 3,760,000 pc)[1]
Apparent magnitude (V)12.0[2]
Characteristics
TypeLenticular galaxy
Other designations
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Characteristics

Its speed relative to the cosmic microwave background is 3,633 ± 18 km/s, which corresponds to a Hubble distance of 53.6 ± 3.8 Mpc.[1]

A measurement not based on redshift gives a distance of 83,500 Mpc.[4]

NGC 1550 group

The NGC 1550 group is a galaxy group that contains eight galaxies: NGC 1550, NGC 1542, UGC 2994, UGC 2998, UGC 3002, UGC 3004, UGC 3010 and PGC 14744. Of these galaxies, NGC 1550 is the brightest.[5]

In 2020, observations from Chandra suggested that galaxies in the NGC 1550 group are heated by active galactic nuclei.[6]

See also

References

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