UGC 12591 | |
---|---|
UGC 12591, taken by the Hubble Space Telescope | |
Observation data (J2000 epoch) | |
Constellation | Pegasus |
Right ascension | 23 25 21.7 |
Declination | 28° 29′ 43″ |
Redshift | 0.023179 |
Heliocentric radial velocity | 6949 ± 10 |
Distance | 394.26 ± 133.84 Mly (120.880 ± 41.036 Mpc) |
Apparent magnitude (B) | 13.90 |
Characteristics | |
Type | S0/a |
Mass | 1.9×10 M☉ |
Apparent size (V) | 1.7′ × 0.7′ |
Other designations | |
MCG +05-55-015, PGC 71392 |
UGC 12591 is a spiral galaxy in the constellation Pegasus. It is located approximately 400 million light-years from Earth. It is the spiral galaxy with the highest known rotational speed of about 500 km/s, almost twice that of our galaxy, the Milky Way. The high rotational speed means the galaxy must be very massive at the center; the galaxy has a mass estimated at 4 times that of the Milky Way.
UGC 12591 is relatively isolated; the nearest galaxy to it is 3.55 million light-years (1.09 Mpc) away. However, its morphology suggests a merger or accretion event in its past: it is somewhat lenticular-like, with a central bulge and dust lanes reminiscent of the Sombrero Galaxy.
References
- ^ "NED results for object UGC 12591". National Aeronautics and Space Administration / Infrared Processing and Analysis Center. Retrieved 16 April 2017.
- ^ Giovanelli, R.; Haynes, M. P.; Rubin, V. C.; Ford, W. K. Jr. (1 February 1986). "UGC 12591 - The most rapidly rotating disk galaxy". The Astrophysical Journal Letters. 301: L7–L11. Bibcode:1986ApJ...301L...7G. doi:10.1086/184613. ISSN 0004-637X.
- "A remarkable galactic hybrid". ESA/Hubble. Retrieved 16 April 2017.
- Ray, Shankar; Bagchi, Joydeep; Dhiwar, Suraj; Pandge, M. B.; Mirakhor, Mohammad; Walker, Stephen A.; Mukherjee, Dipanjan (2022). "Hubble Space Telescope Captures UGC 12591: Bulge/Disc properties, star formation and 'missing baryons' census in a very massive and fast-spinning hybrid galaxy". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 517 (1): 99–117. arXiv:2203.02885. Bibcode:2022MNRAS.517...99R. doi:10.1093/mnras/stac2683.
External links
- Media related to UGC 12591 at Wikimedia Commons
This spiral galaxy article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it. |