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Designations: M74, NGC 628, The Phantom Galaxy
Object Type: Spiral Galaxy
Constellation :
Pisces
RA: 1h 36.7 min
Dec: +15 deg 47 min


Visual Magnitude: 9.4
Surface Brightness 14.4
Size :
10.5 min X 9.5 min
Distance : 32 million light years
Discoverer : Pierre Mechain, 1780

Visual Description: Blazing with the light of 40 billion suns, flinging spiral arms across 97,000 light years of space, M74 is a prima donna among open-face spiral galaxies. At least, that is how it comes across in long-exposure photographs taken through large telescopes. In small telescopes, it is more like a phantom, which is the nickname given to it by Steven James O'Meara in the book "The Messier Objects". No object in the Messier catalogue has proven more troublesome, more elusive, more provocative to amateur astronomers than this giant spiral. The problem is that the galaxy's large apparent size (10'.5) and very low surface brightness require a very dark sky for it to be seen well, if at all! Mechain was right on the mark when he said, "This nebula... is quite broad, very dim, and extremely dif­ficult to observe; it may be distinguished more accurately during fine frosts.  "The fine frosts he refers to, I am sure, are those incredibly transparent evenings following the passage of a cold front, when the night sky is free from moisture and atmospheric contaminants, and the stars can be seen with crystal clarity away from city lights. On these nights you have the best chance to see dim and diffuse objects.

Stephen James O’Meara searched for M74 many nights with Harvard Observatory's 9-inch refractor without success. The fact is, so large an aperture under less-than-perfect skies doomed his quest before it even started. It's best to use a small-aperture instrument, low power, and a wide field of view on the finest of nights.

Locating the field is easy. Look about 1 1/2° east-northeast of 3.6-magnitude Eta (η) Piscium. From dark skies 23 x shows M74 as an obvious but pale disk of uniform light. The longer you look, the more detail you should see. Watch how the core slowly materializes into a compact orb punctuated by a pinpoint of light.  With averted vision a diffuse outer skirt also takes shape.  Jones believed that M74 could not stand anything but low power, but I disagree.  If you can make out the galaxy’s inner core, then that is the time to change to higher power.  The core itself is mottled with the light of many dim stars, which emerge only with high powers.  It is this chance alignment of field stars projected against the nucleus that obviously caused John Herschel to mistake M74 for a globular cluster which in turn led Dreyer to list it as a globular in the New General Catalogue.


Telescope : TMB 152mm APO Refractor
Focal Length: 1200 mm
Mount:
Takahashi NJP
Camera: SSBIG ST-10XME
Exposure: 11 X10minute exposures for luminance, 3 X10 minute exposures for red, green, and blue  (170 minutes total exposure)
Other: Autoguided by SBIG ST402ME

Image Processing: Processed with CCDStack and Photoshop CS

 The Visual description of the M74 "The Phantom" Galaxy was writen by Steven James O'Meara in the book "The Messier Objects" by Stephen James O'Meara. Page. 210.  ISBN number 0-521-55332-6.

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