stevewanstall Posted April 15, 2021 Share Posted April 15, 2021 The weather forecast was dry overnight so I had a go at collecting data from around 9pm till 5 am. I collected around 3 hours in L, and an hour each in R, g and B. Lost quite a lot of frames to poor guiding in the early stage, plus DSS rejected a few too. Subs were 114 s at a gain of 139, all at 1x1, Celestron 9.25, ZWO 1600mm pro Wikipedia: NGC 4216 is one of the largest and brightest spiral galaxies of the Virgo Cluster, with an absolute magnitude that has been estimated to be −22 (i.e.: brighter than the Andromeda Galaxy), and like most spiral galaxies of this cluster shows a deficiency of neutral hydrogen that's concentrated within the galaxy's optical disk and has a low surface density for a galaxy of its type. This explains why NGC 4216 is considered an anaemic galaxy by some authors, also with a low star formation activity for a galaxy of its type.[5] In fact, the galaxy's disk shows pillar-like structures that may have been caused by interactions with the intracluster medium of Virgo and/or with nearby galaxies. In NGC 4216's halo, besides a rich system of globular clusters with a number of them estimated in around 700 (nearly five times more than the Milky Way), two stellar streams that are interpreted as two satellite galaxies being disrupted and absorbed by this galaxy are present. NGC 4216 seems to be in a place of the Virgo cluster where dwarf galaxies are being destroyed/accreted at a high rate, with it suffering many interactions with these type of galaxies. 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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