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Designations: NGC891, Caldwell 23, H V 19,
IRAS02193+4207, UGC1831, MCG7-5-46, CGCG538-52,
PGC09031
Object Type: Spiral Galaxy
Constellation: Andromeda
RA: 02h 22m 36.0s (2000.0)
Dec: +42° 21' 00" (2000.0)
Visual
Magnitude: 10.0
Size: 13.5 x 2.8'
Distance: Unknown
Discoverer: Unknown
Visual Description: One of Autums Gems
and in my opinion, the finest of the edge-on galaxies. NGC891 is easy to find
being on the same declination as Gamma Andromeda and approximately 3.5 degrees
to the east of this star. Alternately it can be found by "star hopping" from the
open cluster M34, which is a similar distance away on its other side i.e. east.
In an 8 inch (20 cm) telescope its elongated spindle shape is obvious and lies
roughly east-west. The dark dust lane is much harder to spot - it is in fact not
dark at all, just less bright! Increased magnification and averted vision helps
but in a 16 inch (40 cm) telescope it becomes more obvious. NGC 891 is a
classical edge-on spiral galaxy and even though its spiral arms are invisible
from our viewpoint, its prominent dust lane and central bulge makes its spiral
classification certain. It is thought to be part of a group that includes nearby
galaxies NGC1023 and 925. The current estimate of its distance is 31 million
light years. NGC891 has been extensively studied over most of the
electromagnetic spectrum and is noted for extensive "extraplanar gas" i.e. gas
far from its galactic plane. Recent high quality images taken with the large 3.5
meter WIYN telescope on Kitt Peak revealed a network of hundreds of dust clouds
and streamers above and below this galaxies plane. How this matter is propelled
out of the disc is the puzzle. Some of the dust streamers observed suggested a
supernova driven fountain or chimney phenomema thought to be tracing the violent
disc-halo interface. However other dust clouds suggested a lower energy origin.
Alton et al. (1988), using the newly commissioned Submillimeter Common-User
Bolometer Array, produced the deepest images yet of any galaxy in this waveband.
They confirmed the presence of dust chimneys extending over 6000 light years.
Seeing Conditions:
Not Recorded
Telescope: TMB 152mm APO
Refractor
Focal
Length: 1201 mm
Mount: Takahashi NJP 160
Camera: SBIG ST10XME for
luminance and Starlight XPress
MX916 for color
Exposure:
6 10-minute Luminance exposures and 2 10-minuute
exposures for each color (red, green, blue)
Other: SBIG STV autoguider
(color exposures) SBIG st402me for autoguiding the luminance image

Copyright(c) 2007 Doug Sanqunetti. All rights reserved