M82
From South Dublin Astronomical Society
| M82 | |
|---|---|
| Type | Irregular Galaxy |
| NGC | NGC 3034 |
| Constellation | Ursa Major |
| Right Ascension | 9h 55.8m |
| Declination | +69° 41' |
| Magnitude | 8.4 |
| Size | 11 x 5 arc min. |
| | |
| Image:M82 messier image.jpg | |
M81 and M82 are part of one of the nearest groups of galaxies to our
own Local Group at “only” 12 million light years away. One, M 81, is a large
spiral tilted almost face-on to us and showing a brilliant nucleus with tightly
wound arms. M 82 shows very unusual structure in detailed photographs and
is now believed to be going through a huge phase of star formation. This is
probably the result of a close encounter between the two galaxies — they
presently lie just 150,000 light years from each other.
The handiest way to find the galaxies is to take-off from Alpha Ursae
Majoris to 23 UMa, 10½° a little north of west. From here, go 6½° to the
northeast and you’ll be in the right region. M81 is probably easiest to spot as
it appears like a magnitude 7 “star” in smaller binoculars. Pushing up the
magnification will let you see it as a pale oval-shaped glow. Just half a
degree to it’s north, with larger binoculars, you should spot M82 as a thin
spike of ghostly light.
M1 | M2 | M3 | M4 | M5 | M6 | M7 | M8 | M9 | M10 | M11 | M12 | M13 | M14 | M15 | M16 | M17 | M18 | M19 | M20 | M21 | M22 | M23 | M24 | M25 | M26 | M27 | M28 | M29 | M30 | M31 | M32 | M33 | M34 | M35 | M36 | M37 | M38 | M39 | M40 | M41 | M42 | M43 | M44 | M45 | M46 | M47 | M48 | M49 | M50 | M51 | M52 | M53 | M54 | M55 | M56 | M57 | M58 | M59 | M60 | M61 | M62 | M63 | M64 | M65 | M66 | M67 | M68 | M69 | M70 | M71 | M72 | M73 | M74 | M75 | M76 | M77 | M78 | M79 | M80 | M81 | M82 | M83 | M84 | M85 | M86 | M87 | M88 | M89 | M90 | M91 | M92 | M93 | M94 | M95 | M96 | M97 | M98 | M99 | M100 | M101 | M102 | M103 | M104 | M105 | M106 | M107 | M108 | M109 | M110