NGC 2403

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Template:Short description Template:Infobox Galaxy

NGC 2403 (also known as Caldwell 7) is an intermediate spiral galaxy in the constellation Camelopardalis. It is an outlying member of the M81 Group,[1] and is approximately 8 million light-years distant.

Observation history

The galaxy was discovered by German-British astronomer William Herschel on 1 November 1788.[2] Edwin Hubble detected Cepheid variables in NGC 2403 using the Hale Telescope, making it the first galaxy beyond the Local Group within which a Cepheid was discovered.[1] By 1963, 59 variables had been found in NGC 2403, of which 17 were eventually confirmed as Cepheids, with periods between 20 and 87 days. As late as 1950 Hubble was using a distance of just under 2 million light years for the galaxy's distance, but by 1968 the analysis of the Cepheids increased this by almost a factor of five, to within 0.2 magnitudes of the current value.

Characteristics

File:A Galaxy of Birth and Death.jpg
NGC 2403 imaged by the Nicholas U. Mayall Telescope at the Kitt Peak National Observatory

NGC 2403 bears a similarity to M33, containing numerous star-forming H II regions, but being a little bit larger at approximately 90,000 light-years in diameter compared to the 61,100 light-year diameter of M33.[3] It is a flocculent spiral galaxy, with short, patchy arms.[4] The northern spiral arm connects it to the star forming region NGC 2404.[1] NGC 2403 can be observed using 10×50 binoculars.[1] NGC 2404 is 940 light-years in diameter, making it one of the largest known H II regions. This H II region represents striking similarity with NGC 604 in M33, both in size and location in galaxy.

Supernovae and supernovae imposters

There have been four reported astronomical transients in the galaxy:

Companions

NGC 2403 has two known companions. One is the relatively massive dwarf galaxy DDO 44. It is currently being disrupted by NGC 2403, as evidenced by a tidal stream extending Template:Cvt on both sides of DDO 44. DDO 44 is approaching NGC 2403 at a distance much closer than typical for dwarf galaxy interactions. It currently has a V-band absolute magnitude of −12.9, but its progenitor was even more luminous.[10]

The other known companion is officially named MADCASH J074238+652501-dw, although it is nicknamed MADCASH-1. The name refers to the MADCASH (Magellanic Analog Dwarf Companions and Stellar Halos) project. MADCASH-1 is similar to typical dwarf spheroidal galaxies in the Local Group; it is quite faint, with an absolute V-band magnitude of −7.81, and has only an ancient, metal-poor population of red giant stars.[11]

See also

References

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External links

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Template:Sky Template:Catalogs Template:Caldwell catalogue Template:Ngc25 Template:Camelopardalis