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Thread: Object of the Week January 30, 2022 - NGC3198

  1. #1
    Administrator/Co-Founder Dragan's Avatar
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    Object of the Week January 30, 2022 - NGC3198

    NGC 3198
    UGC5572
    PGC 30197
    Herschel 146

    Galaxy

    Constellation: Ursa Major

    RA: 10 19 54.9

    DEC: +45 33 09

    Class: SB(rs)c
    Mag: 10.3
    Size: 8.6’x3.3’

    Give or take 47,292,674.7 light years in the direction of the ‘Bears Toes’ in Ursa Major lies this weeks OOTW. NGC3198 is rather bright, elongated barred spiral visible in a wide range of telescope apertures. One account I found is that NGC3198 was discovered by Lord Rosse Williams Parsons in the mid-19th century. Another was that it was discovered by Sir William Herschel in 1788. Anyone?

    Scientifically, NGC3198 has played a pivotal role in our understanding in the universe. In one paper published in 1999, researchers used the Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2) on Hubble to locate and measure the distance to 52 different Cepheid Variables located in NGC3198. Using this data, astronomers were able to ascertain a rather accurate distance to our OOTW of 14.5±1.2 Mpc – giving us the number I sarcastically opened this post with. NGC3198’s distance is so well measured that is used as a ‘calibration’ galaxy for the Key Project. In short, the Key Project was a study using data obtained through Cepheid observations in ~25 ‘nearby’ (~65Mly) spiral galaxies from the HST to help measure and refine the Hubble Constant – one of the principle goals for which the HST was designed and built. These refined distances of nearby galaxies would then help to refine observations and distances to galaxies further away (65Mly to more than 325Mly distance). NGC3198 is now used to help refine these other observations.

    Another interesting bit I learned about NGC3198 is that it’s considered the “flagship” galaxy for evidence of dark matter in galaxies. In a 2015 paper titled The dark matter distribution in the spiral
    NGC 3198 out to 0.22Rvir alludes to the amount of dark matter measured in NGC3198 may actually be at least 4 times larger than the amount of visible matter. NGC3198 is MUCH larger than it appears to the eye.

    To an eye looking through a telescope, NGC3198 makes for a fine sight. Telescopes in the 10” range provide the observer with a rather large, faint smudge with the possibility of spotting some mottling. In scopes approached 18” to 20” from a dark sky, the galaxy appears elongated on a NE to SW position angle with a bright core and the makings of spirality.

    So if you’re out late this dark moon or next, please point your scope towards the Great Bears Paws. I think you’ll be pleasantly surprised at this galaxy. Not just for its appearance in the eyepiece, but for its overall contributions to the advancement of our understanding of this awesome universe!

    And as always,
    Give it a go and let us know! Good luck and great viewing!

    NGC3198_AdamBlock.png
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    Dragan Nikin
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    "Difficult to see from Chile this galaxy is!" Luckily I observed it from SQM 21.4 skies in central Spain in March 2015 using my 20" dob. I didn't notice that is was a barred galaxy though:

    At 320x this galaxy is an elongated glow with a reasonably bright central region. It takes an S-shape because of two spiral arms. The south-eastern arm is split in two and this is very difficult to see.

  3. #3
    Member Clear Skies's Avatar
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    Three observations in my log, the most recent one almost 11 years ago. 12" SCT @179x / 27' under less than optimal Dutch skies, but the fact that I was able to make out a bit of detail, as described below, is testimony to the detail this galaxy is willing to reveal:

    A NE-SW elongated, faint streak, slightly brighter in the center, a relatively large, brighter core. Using AV the core is larger and brightens notably, very faintly shows slightly ragged structure. Directly NNE and twice that distance towards the NNW are mag. 11 stars, half the distance of the NNE mag. 11 star, towards the south, is a mag. 13 star.

    The other two observations in my log were in an 8" SCT, both in spring 2007. Back then, in the smaller aperture I was unable to make out much more than a central brightening, confirming Dragan's note that a scope in the 10" range may be required to start making out fainter details.

    NGC3198-1.jpg NGC3198-2.jpg NGC3198-3.jpg

    Click here to download this observing guide.
    Victor van Wulfen

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    - SQM is nothing. Transparency is everything.

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    I am sure Steve will chip in but Wolfgang has William Herschel discovering it on the 15th Jan 1788. I can check his massive tome on this for further information.
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    Got two observation on NGC 3198 as a part of the "Rosse Spirals".

    In the last observation with 14.5" and 283x I wrote: large, around 5' long NE-SW elongated galaxy; bright with estimated tightly spiral arms; easiest spiral started 1' SW of the core and turns NE without connecting the core, quickly disappearing; another spiral arm starts 1' NE without any winding, only visible as a longish brightening; from the long axis two dark structures rises into the galaxy without showing a clear spiral structure

    sketch: 14.5", 283x, NELM 6m5+, Seeing II
    NGC3198.jpg
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  6. #6
    Administrator/Co-Founder Dragan's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by obrazell View Post
    I am sure Steve will chip in but Wolfgang has William Herschel discovering it on the 15th Jan 1788. I can check his massive tome on this for further information.

    Yeah. I assumed Herschel was the rightful discoverer, especially with the designation "Herschel 146". But Rosse also was listed as a discoverer so I was a bit uncertain.
    Clear Dark Skies,
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    Member Steve Gottlieb's Avatar
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    Through Jimi's 48" in early May 2016, observing also with Howard Banich:

    NGC 3198 is a showpiece, large spiral extending SW-NE, ~8.0'x2.5'. Contains a bright, elongated central "bar", punctuated by a very small bright core that rises to a stellar nucleus. Slightly brighter patches are visible at the ends of the central region, where the spiral arms emerge. A tight inner arm is attached on the northeast end; it bends back sharply and closely parallels the central region, extending southwest for a length of ~3.5'. An outer low surface brightness arm sweeps clockwise on the southwest end. A symmetric outer arm on the northeast end (of slightly higher surface brightness) curls clockwise towards the west. The outer tip to tip diameter is nearly 8'. An uncatalogued fairly bright double star [separation ~3.7"] is 3.5' NNE of center, just beyond the halo and a mag 14 star is 2.2' SSE of center.
    Steve
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  8. #8
    Member Steve Gottlieb's Avatar
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    Here is a copy of Caroline's handwritten notes with NGC 3198 boxed and my translation:

    "considerably bright, much elongated, about 5' long and 2' broad, very gradually brighter in the middle, from south-preceding to north-following. 15 Leo Minor follows by 32 min 1 sec, south by 0° 24'."

    The "1860" in parenthesis has nothing to do with a date, but refers to his discovery number.

    NGC 3198.jpg
    Steve
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  9. #9
    Member Howard B's Avatar
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    Following on Steve's observation above, here are my notes and sketch of 3198 from May 4, 2016 with Jimi's 48-inch:

    "A nearly edge-on barred spiral, the double spiral arm stands out quite well. The central bar is greatly fore shortened, but appears brightest on each end. 375x, 21.76 SQM."

    NGC 3198_48inchsketch_rotated.jpg NGC 3198_48inchsketch_invert_rotated.jpg
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  10. #10
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    Hi, here's my observation from 1/31/2022: Ngc 3198 galaxy in Ursa Major ; mag:10.27 ; size: 6.5' x 1.8' ; fairly bright, elongated with bright core and mottled arms; I used a 14mm Meade Ultra wide eyepiece at 153x with my 14.5 Starstructure f/4.3ngc 3198.jpg
    Raul Leon
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    My observation with my 20" from March 13, 2015 from mid-Spain:

    At 320x a large galaxy with a reasonably bright central region. It takes an S-shape because of two spiral arms. The southeastern arm is split in two but this is barely discernible.

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