NGC 3109
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NGC 3109 is a small barred Magellanic type spiral or irregular galaxy around 4.35 Mly away in the direction of the constellation of Hydra. It was discovered by John Herschel on March 24, 1835 while he was in what is now South Africa.
Size and morphology
NGC 3109 is classified as a Magellanic type irregular galaxy, but it may in fact be a small spiral galaxy. Based on the D25.5 isophote at the B-band with an angular diameter of 1,980 arcseconds, it has an isophotal diameter approximately 12.80 kiloparsecs (41,700 light-years) across, slightly larger than the Large Magellanic Cloud but smaller than the Triangulum Galaxy. If it is a spiral galaxy, it would be the smallest in the Local Group. NGC 3109 has a mass of about 2.3×109 times the mass of the Sun (M☉), of which 20% is in the form of neutral hydrogen. It is oriented edge-on from our point of view, and may contain a disk and a halo. The disk appears to be composed of stars of all ages, whereas the halo contains only very old and metal-poor stars. NGC 3109 does not appear to possess a galactic nucleus.
From measurements of the neutral atomic hydrogen in the galaxy, it has been found that the disk of NGC 3109 is warped. The warp has the same radial velocity as gas in the Antlia Dwarf galaxy, indicating that the two galaxies had a close encounter approximately one billion years ago.
Composition
Based on spectroscopy of blue supergiants in NGC 3109, it is known that the galaxy has a low metallicity, similar to that of the Small Magellanic Cloud. It is one of the most metal-poor star-forming galaxies in the Local group. NGC 3109 seems to contain an unusually large number of planetary nebulae for its luminosity. It also contains a substantial amount of dark matter.
Location
NGC 3109 is located about 1.33 megaparsecs (4.3 Mly) away, in the constellation Hydra. This puts it at the very outskirts of the Local Group. Its membership of the Local Group has been questioned, because it seems to be receding faster than estimates of the Local Group's escape velocity. It is distant enough from the largest members of the Local Group that it has not been tidally influenced by them.
NGC 3109 has two satellite galaxies, the Antlia Dwarf and Antlia B.
Luminous blue variable
Although no supernovae have been observed in NGC 3109 yet, a luminous blue variable, designated AT2018akx (type LBV, mag. 17.5), was discovered by the All Sky Automated Survey for SuperNovae on 22 March 2018.
Gallery
- NGC 3109 imaged by GALEX (ultraviolet)
- NGC 3109 with Hubble
- NGC 3109 with the legacy surveys
Notes
See also
Further reading
- Grebel, Gallagher, Harbeck (2003) ArXiv.org. retrieved November 2007
External links
- NGC 3109 on WikiSky: , , , , , , , ,