NGC 4979
Galaxy NGC 4979 / IC 4198 |
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NGC 4979 SDSS | |
AladinLite | |
Constellation | Berenike's hair |
Position equinox : J2000.0 , epoch : J2000.0 |
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Right ascension | 13 h 07 m 42.820 s |
declination | + 24 ° 48 ′ 38.13 ″ |
Appearance | |
Morphological type | Sbc / LINER |
Brightness (visual) | 14.3 mag |
Brightness (B-band) | 15.1 mag |
Angular expansion | 1.0 ′ × 0.7 ′ |
Position angle | 100 ° |
Surface brightness | 13.8 mag / arcmin² |
Physical data | |
Affiliation | Coma galaxy clusters |
Redshift | 0.021125 ± 0.000020 |
Radial velocity | 6333 ± 6 km / s |
Stroke distance v rad / H 0 |
(283 ± 20) x 10 6 ly (86.9 ± 6.1) Mpc |
history | |
discovery | Wilhelm Herschel |
Discovery date | April 10, 1785 |
Catalog names | |
NGC 4979 • IC 4198 • UGC 8209 • PGC 45484 • CGCG 130-009 • MCG + 04-31-007 • 2MASX J13074277 + 2448379 • GC 3416 • H III 346 • 2MASS J13074279 + 2448380 • NSA 120008 • WISEA J130742.81 + 244838.3 |
NGC 4979 = IC 4198 is a 14.3 mag bright bar-spiral galaxy of the Hubble type SB with an active galaxy core in the constellation Haar der Berenike in the northern sky . It is an estimated 283 million light years from the Milky Way and about 85,000 light years in diameter. The galaxy is considered a member of the Coma cluster of galaxies .
In the same area of the sky are u. a. the galaxies IC 854 and IC 4202 .
The object was discovered twice; first on April 10, 1785 by Wilhelm Herschel with an 18.7-inch reflector telescope , who described it as "eF, pL, lE, verified with 240 power" (observation listed as NGC 4979 ); then on June 20, 1895 by Stéphane Javelle (listed as IC 4198 ).