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Thread: Object of the Week June 7, 2015 - The Tadpole Galaxy, UGC 10214

  1. #1
    Member Steve Gottlieb's Avatar
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    Object of the Week June 7, 2015 - The Tadpole Galaxy, UGC 10214

    Tadpole Galaxy
    UGC 10214 = VV 29 = Arp 188 = MCG +09-26-056 = CGCG 275-023 = PGC 57129
    RA: 16h 06m 03.9s
    DEC: +55° 25' 32"
    Type: SB(s)c pec

    Size: 3.6’ x 0.8’
    Mag: 13.7V, 14.4B

    This remarkable disrupted spiral with an immense tidal tail was made famous by an iconic HST image back in 2002

    heic0206a.jpg

    But it was imaged by Zwicky using the Palomar 200-inch back in the mid-50's and featured in his seminal 1956 paper "Multiple Galaxies". He commented "The system shown on Plate IX obviously has suffered some encounter with other galaxies which, however, cannot be located with certainty at the present time." That's probably still true today, though it has been suggested it is a very blue, compact galaxy behind the Tadpole but shining through the distorted spiral arms.

    Russian astronomer Boris Vorontsov-Velyaminov first catalogued this galaxy in 1959 (VV 29). He referred to it as "Zwicky's System", but I've never seen that nickname used elsewhere. Halton Arp included it in his 1966 "Atlas of Peculiar Galaxies" (Arp 188) and commented in his notes section, "Disturbance inside western arm, filament may originate there"

    The redshift-based distance of the Tadpole is ~425 million light-years and this implies the tidal tail stretches across 280,000 light-years! This dramatic processed image, reveals several blue splotches of starburst activity in the tail. The background galaxies provide as an amazing canvas.

    TadpoleGalaxyPS1V9snyder.jpg

    My first views of this galaxy were in 2002 and 2004 with my 18-inch. It was not a difficult catch at V = 13.7, but the tidal tail was not seen. I also picked up three nearby galaxies -- make sure not to confuse these with UGC 10214!

    Fairly faint, elongated 2:1 WSW-ENE, ~1.0'x0.5'. The galaxy seemed brighter on the ENE end. Located 7.5' W of mag 8.4 SAO 29805. MCG +09-26-054 lies 4.3' SW, MCG +09-26-050 9.4' SSW and MCG +09-26-052 12' NNW.

    My one extreme scope view was through Jimi's 48-inch and it was a stunner --

    At 488x, the "Tadpole Galaxy" appeared fairly bright, elongated 2:1 E-W, ~1.2'x0.7', contains a bright, elongated core (bar) and nucleus. The tidal plume was visible as a fairly thin, low surface brightness tail, extending east from the main body. It was faint, but clearly visible with averted vision angling east-northeast and doubling the overall length to ~2.5'. There was an extremely faint knot at the east tip. The portion of the plume further east was not seen with confidence.

    The closest companion is 2MASX J16054969+5526164 = PGC 2502068, a small V = 16.2 galaxy that lies 2.1' WNW. This was noted as "faint, very small, elongated N-S, 12"x6".

    Lots of challenges here! What aperture will reveal the Tadpole galaxy? What about the structure in the galaxy? Can you glimpse the tidal tail? How many of the nearby companions?

    "GIVE IT A GO AND LET US KNOW"
    Steve
    24" f/3.7 Starstructure
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    Contributing Editor, Sky & Tel

  2. #2
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    Hi Steve,

    wonderful object for large aperture. My notes:

    16", 257x, NELM 6m5+
    UGC galaxy itself easy visible as 1:2 E-W elongated object; a little bit concentrated to its middle; no knots or tidal arm visible

    27", 293x-419x; NELM 7m+, Seeing III
    galaxy bright and flashy; elongated nucleus with bar like structure E-W, at the end of the bar respectively two knots where faint arms begins to start; tidal tail faint but visible with averted vision; looks wider visually than in the HST photos; within the tidal two condensations are visible, W condensation a little bit brighter; PGC 2502068 is visible with averted vision

    UGC10214.jpg
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  3. #3
    Member RolandosCY's Avatar
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    Quite an interesting object. I observed it last night with my 18" under my SQM 21.1 skies. It was very faint, elongated (I would say more than the 2:1 that Steve mentioned, with some very faint stars nearby. The 8th magnitude star is a severe hindrance to observation, it pays to have it outside of the FOV. I did draw it but I have not yet managed to scan the drawing, I will post it as soon as I scan it.
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