View Full Version here: : Dwarf Galaxy IC1613 in Cetus
John Hothersall
22-11-2013, 06:23 PM
SPX350 F4.5, ST10XME, Astrodon filters L HaRGB.
This Dwarf galaxy is quite bright - mag 9.9 - at 2.38 million lyrs away closer to us than M31 and has a blue shift. Somewhere in Cetus near Pisces it is really not imaged much but has a large HII regions. It was discovered in 1906 and I noticed it in CCD Calc so thought I would give it a try as you don't see it imaged often, even though it is quite large at 16x14 arc min.
L-5hrs50min
HaRGB-1hr Binx2
Thanks, John.
RickS
22-11-2013, 06:44 PM
Nice image of a weird object, John!
Very cool.... like a dwarf Magellanic Cloud....
dutch2
22-11-2013, 09:05 PM
Great image, well done.:thumbsup:
madbadgalaxyman
22-11-2013, 09:54 PM
John,
I enjoyed your image of this cute little irregular galaxy.
The rate of star formation must be low.
We are currently discussing another small irregular galaxy in the Local Group of Galaxies, in the science forum:
"the WLM system"
(Wolf-Lundmark-Melotte galaxy)
A comprehensive recent discussion, with many data tables, of all of the galaxies in and near the Local Group, can be found in this .pdf :
https://www.astrosci.ca/users/alan/Nearby_Dwarfs_Database_files/mcconnachie2012.pdf
Cheers,
Robert
gregbradley
23-11-2013, 12:23 AM
Those are great images John.
Greg.
Lovely shot. Nice to see something totally different. Nice little H2 region in there.
nandopg
23-11-2013, 06:55 AM
Hi John,
Your images are true inspiring and this dwarf galaxies is not different. The clean background shows lots of other small galaxies up there, not to mention all the details of the HII region.
Thank you for sharing this beauty.
Fernando
PS:
Robert: Thanks for the pdf with the great report presenting data of so many ""nearby"" dwarf galaxies.
strongmanmike
23-11-2013, 09:55 AM
Hey that's excellent John! I saw this in my image search actually but it didn't make the cut... so I'm glad you decided to shoot it, as it looks very cool, nicely processed :thumbsup:
Mike
alpal
23-11-2013, 10:46 AM
Nice job - the ha regions have come out well.
It was also imaged on Cloudy Nights:
http://www.cloudynights.com/ubbthreads/showflat.php/Cat/0/Number/6195673/page/0/view/collapsed/sb/5/o/all/fpart/1
tilbrook@rbe.ne
23-11-2013, 06:53 PM
Fascinating galaxy, another one I haven't seen before.
Thanks John!:thumbsup:
Cheers,
Justin.
madbadgalaxyman
23-11-2013, 10:49 PM
Ron asked me in the Science Forum about how bright the stars are in
IC 1613.
His question and my answer are in the recent thread about the WLM galaxy.
cheers,
The Mad Galaxy Man
John Hothersall
23-11-2013, 11:04 PM
Thanks for the heads up, may try WLM next year.
Sound interesting MG Man, will give it a read.
Thanks for the comments everyone, though this might be a bit unusual but the HII region made it worthwhile. There are so many unimaged unusual objects around I keep finding.
John.
multiweb
24-11-2013, 08:45 AM
Cool shot John. That's a faint one alright. The Ha regions pop up alright. :thumbsup:
Nicola
25-11-2013, 09:39 PM
How nice! Well done! :eyepop:
astronobob
26-11-2013, 02:52 PM
Nice imaging John, yeah never seen this target, rather interesting, looks like a Glob gone wrong in a way at this resolution.
Them Red HII regions, are they part of thie galaxy, i assums so ! Hey, that lower red HII object appears to have some arms reaching out of it, any idea what the go is there ?
Facinating :cool2:
John Hothersall
27-11-2013, 12:56 AM
The HII structures inside IC1613 are in the form of giant shells believed to be supernovae driven or driven by some of the massive blue supergiant stars in the area but nobody is entirely sure.
The lower HII region I imaged with one 5min Binx2 OIII sub and the lower region was the only patch to show up, but I did not think it was good enough to try a set.
There is a NASA image I found but quality is not so good.
John.
Shiraz
27-11-2013, 01:24 PM
excellent image John - very interesting object as well.
madbadgalaxyman
29-11-2013, 11:35 AM
John,
IC 1613 and NGC 6822 and the WLM galaxy are much more typical of dwarf irregular galaxies than relatively high surface brightness examples like the LMC and NGC 4449
In essence, dIrr galaxies, unless they happen to be undergoing a vigorous (and episodic) starburst, continue to form very massive and luminous young stars, which energize HII regions, but they form these young hot blue stars at a low rate.
One of my absolute favourite dwarf irregular galaxies that is undergoing a burst of star formation is IC 4662 ; this tiny dwarf galaxy nevertheless contains two giant HII regions, which I have even seen visually with a 10 inch.
However, it is rare to find a dwarf irregular which has Ha emission all over it.
The stars that energize HII regions burn out in a few million years, which is a blink of an eye on a cosmic timescale, so HII emission traces what is usually called the most recent star formation.
All of those pretty HII regions that we see in our images might be gone in a short while, perhaps within a million years time, as the stars that energize them become red supergiants and stop producing that short wavelength UV that is necessary to make them gently glow.
cheers,
Robert
P.S. When I say "HII region", I also include all regions of ionized hydrogen, including supershells energized by supernovae and including diffuse Halpha emission.
(HII , technically, refers to any region of Ha emission)
Of course it is strange of astronomers to use the words "recent" when they mean within the last 10 million years, and "very recent" when they mean within the last 1 or 2 million years....
especially considering that if I live a hundred years, a million years is still ten thousand times my life-span!
Ross G
04-12-2013, 10:15 PM
A beautiful looking capture John.
A new object for me.
Ross.
SkyViking
05-12-2013, 07:29 AM
What a cute little galaxy, a great find John. Your image is excellent and really shows off the various features, including the HII region. It looks like a small version of Barnard's Galaxy actually. Well done!
vBulletin® v3.8.7, Copyright ©2000-2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.