NGC 1433
NGC 1433
NGC 1433 is a barred spiral galaxy with a double ring structure located in the constellation of Horologium, at a distance of 46 million light-years from Earth.
It is a Seyfert galaxy with an active galactic nucleus.
The central region of the galaxy displays intense star formation activity, with an irregular star-forming ring and weak radio wave emission. Star formation is also noticeable in the spiral arms but not the bar of the galaxy.
A jet of material flowing away from the central black hole of the galaxy extending for only 150 light-years has been found.
Image acquired with CHI-1, data from 8 one-click observations.
Total exposure time 640 minutes
LRGB 16 subs of 600s with each filter.
It is a Seyfert galaxy with an active galactic nucleus.
The central region of the galaxy displays intense star formation activity, with an irregular star-forming ring and weak radio wave emission. Star formation is also noticeable in the spiral arms but not the bar of the galaxy.
A jet of material flowing away from the central black hole of the galaxy extending for only 150 light-years has been found.
Image acquired with CHI-1, data from 8 one-click observations.
Total exposure time 640 minutes
LRGB 16 subs of 600s with each filter.
Telescope
CHI-1 Planewave CDK24
Camera
FLI PL9000
Location
El Sauce Observatory, Chile
Date of observation
8/03, 20/08, 25/08, 28/08, 20/10, 24/10/2022
Filters
LRGB
Processing
AstroPixelProcessor, Photoshop CC with AstroPanel Pro, Astronomy Tools, Topaz Sharpen AI and NoiseXTerminator plug-ins