Topsy Turvy Galaxy (NGC 1313)
Topsy Turvy Galaxy (NGC 1313)
NGC 1313 is a field galaxy and a barred spiral galaxy discovered by the Scottish astronomer James Dunlop on 27 September 1826. It has a diameter of about 50,000 light-years, or about half the size of the Milky Way. NGC 1313 has a strikingly uneven shape and its axis of rotation is not exactly in its centre. NGC 1313 also shows strong starburst activity and associated supershells. NGC 1313 is dominated by scattered patches of intense star formation, which gives the galaxy a rather ragged appearance. The uneven shape, the ragged appearance and the strong starburst can all be explained by a galactic collision in the past. However, NGC 1313 seems to be an isolated galaxy and has no direct neighbours. Therefore, it is not clear whether it has swallowed a small companion in its past. (Wikipedia)
With nothing but cloudy nights and nautical twilight I wanted to process something in the Southern Hemisphere. I find this galaxy interesting and like that there is IFN around it, and I was able to pull some of it out.
With nothing but cloudy nights and nautical twilight I wanted to process something in the Southern Hemisphere. I find this galaxy interesting and like that there is IFN around it, and I was able to pull some of it out.
Telescope
ASA 500N
Camera
FLI PL 16083
Location
Rio Hurtado, Coquimbo Region, Chile
Date of observation
Published Feb 11, 2021
Filters
Astrodon
Processing
Pixinsight + Photoshop