Cetus A Galaxy
Here is M77, also known as Cetus A Galaxy, due to its location in the constellation Cetus, the Sea Monster. According the mythology, Cetus was sent by deity Poseidon to punish queen Cassiopeia for her never-ending boasting, but later on defeated by Perseus, who used Medusa’s Head to turn Cetus into a stone.
Now,
lets talk about the galaxy itself. It does look like a stellar object, but it
may still reveal some nebulosity halo around it with averted vision. I have seen it in my telescope with 100x and
the view is similar, but enhanced by the magnification: a roundish and bright
core surrounded by some nebular halo.
The best
thing about it is, as I said before, that one is looking at a spiral galaxy
located about 60 million light years away. With moderately dark skies, it can
be easily found by aiming at the 4th mag star Delta Ceti and then less than 1 degree east of it.
Happy
bino-hunting!!!
LG
Edited
by Jennifer Steinberg (editor in chief).
No comments:
Post a Comment