IC 1259
| Galaxy  IC 1259  | 
|
|---|---|
| 
 | 
|
| SDSS recording | |
| AladinLite | |
| Constellation | Dragon | 
| 
Position  equinox : J2000.0 , epoch : J2000.0  | 
|
| Right ascension | 17 h 27 m 25.8 s | 
| declination | + 58 ° 31 ′ 09 ″ | 
| Appearance | |
| Morphological type | A: S?  B: S0 pec?  | 
| Brightness (visual) | A: 13.5 mag  B: 14.9 mag  | 
| Brightness (B-band) | A: 14.3 mag  B: 15.9 mag  | 
| Angular expansion | A: 0.3 x 0.3  B: 0.8 x 0.4  | 
| Position angle | B: 133 ° | 
| Surface brightness | A: 10.7 mag / arcmin²  B: 13.7 mag / arcmin²  | 
| Physical data | |
| Redshift | 0.025300 | 
| Radial velocity | 7585 km / s | 
| 
Stroke distance  v rad / H 0  | 
(348 ± 24)  x  10 6  ly (106.6 ± 7.5) Mpc  | 
| history | |
| discovery | Lewis A. Swift | 
| Discovery date | July 19, 1887 | 
| Catalog names | |
| IC 1259 • UGC 10869 • PGC 60323/60325 • CGCG 300-030 • MCG + 10-25-37 • Arp 310, part of 311 • VV 101 • KCPG 575B | |
IC 1259 = Arp 310 is an interacting pair of galaxies in the Dragon constellation in the northern sky , an estimated 348 million light years from the Milky Way . Halton Arp organized his catalog of unusual galaxies into groups according to purely morphological criteria. This pair of galaxies belongs to the class Unclassified double galaxies . It also forms the galaxy triplet Arp 311 together with the galaxies IC 1258 and IC 1260 .
The object was discovered by Lewis A. Swift on July 19, 1887 .
Web links
literature
- Jeff Kanipe and Dennis Webb: The Arp Atlas of Peculiar Galaxies - A Chronicle and Observer's Guide , Richmond 2006, ISBN 978-0-943396-76-7