Leeds Astronomical Society LAS Meetings Observing Membership

 

 

NGC3190 - Leo Quartet

(James Clark)
Cropped close-up (James Clark)

Information...

NGC3190 is sometimes used to refer to the edge-on galaxy with a prominent dust lane in the centre of the above image. It is also used to refer to the 'Leo Quartet', which consists of NGC3187 (the 'S' shaped galaxy with distorted arms); NGC3193 (fuzzy eliptical); NGC3185 (face-on barred spiral to the right); and NGC3189 (the edge-on galaxy with the aforesaid dust lane).

NGC3189 is estimated to be about 80 million light years away.

The Leo Quartet should not be confused with the more well known (and more prominent) Leo Triplet of galaxies.

For more info. see the Wikipedia entry.

 

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Map

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Measuring Angles

Hold your arm at full length, then close one eye & use the hand shapes shown above to measure the angular distance between the stars.

(Ain't anatomy wonderful!)

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Apparent Magnitude

The apparent magnitude of a star is a measure of how bright it appears from Earth. The scale was introduced over 2,000 years ago by the Greek astronomer Hipparchus, who grouped stars into six categories. The brightest 20 or so were deemed to be 'first magnitude', slightly dimmer stars 'second magnitude', and so on until the barely visible stars were classed as 'sixth magnitude'.

Later it was recognised that our eyesight, once it has been given time to get used to darkness, has a logarithmic response. i.e. a Mag. 1 star is actually 2.512 times brighter than a Mag. 2 star, or 6.310 times brighter than a Mag. 3 star (2.512 x 2.512 = 6.310).

The six Magnitudes thus corresponds to a 2.5126 difference in brightness or 100x.

Apparent magnitude

Today the scale has now been extended, so that brighter objects can have an apparent magnitude of 0 or even negative. The brightest star Sirius, for example, has an apparent magnitude of -1.44 and the Sun is a whopping -26.74, due to it's close proximity to Earth.