Observations of NGC4567
These are the observations available for NGC4567. If you have any of your own that you'd like to submit we'd love to put them on the website.
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The Siamese Twins NGC 4567 and NGC 4568 in Virgo
At the beginning of May 2018, I spent several evenings gathering data on the Siamese Twins, NGC 4567 and NGC 4568. Realising how faint the objects were, I opted for 10-minute exposures which, unfortunately, challenged the tracking performance of my, then EQ6 mount, and virtually guaranteed that I had a satellite trail on every sub. After calibrating the data, I decided not to process them since I considered that they just weren't good enough. I then ran out of dark skies and forgot about this unfinished project.
I was reminded of the Twins by Callum Potter's recent BAA Deep Sky Notes and went back to revisit the data that I gathered in 2018. By applying some new image processing techniques, I've been able to use the data I gathered, complete with satellite trails, though I confess they have challenged my cloning skills.
NGC 4567 and NGC 4568 (nicknamed the Butterfly Galaxies or Siamese Twins are a set of unbarred spiral galaxies about 60 million light-years away in the constellation Virgo. They were both discovered by William Herschel in 1784. They are part of the Virgo Cluster of galaxies. These galaxies are in the process of colliding and merging with each other, as studies of their distributions of neutral and molecular hydrogen show, with the highest star-formation activity in the part where they overlap. However, the system is still in an early phase of interaction. (Wikipedia)
Data gathered between 7th and 18th May 2018. 20 x 10-minutes Luminance, 10 X 10-minutes each RGB.
This is a crop from the original image, which presents the Twins better but at the expense of losing NGC 4564 from the top of the image. The galaxy at the bottom of the image is an edge-on spiral galaxy IC 3578 at magnitude 15. Between it and NGC 4568 is the very faint (magnitude 18.2) PGC042075. There are many other faint galaxies in this image.
Image Details
- Telescope: 8" Ritchey-Chretien.
- Camera: QSI 583 with a Lodestar off-axis guide camera.
- Mount: Skywatcher EQ6.
Image data were captured on the evenings of 17th to 27th February 2020. The data comprise 24 x 5-minutes luminance and 6 x 10-minutes each of RGB.
David Davies - (4 May 2021).
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NGC 4567 and NGC 4568 in Virgo
I have a new sketch of the May 2020 galaxy of the month (NGC 4567-8) that I made with my 20-inch, observing from our dark site in the Appalachian region of Pennsylvania (SQM 21.8). The sketch was made at 360x with North up.
Ivan Maly - (20 May 2020).
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Galaxy of the Month and other Galaxies in Virgo
For me last night was very good indeed. I often say that the Watec cameras perform well in poor and hazy conditions, and they do. But as with eyepiece views on a cracking night, images on the monitor really zing when the sky delivers!
My initial target last night was NGC 4410A the Galaxy of the Month. I looked at the image on the Webb website, immediately assumed the target was one of the larger face on spirals and star hopped off after syncing on Denebola. When the last goto move put the larger spirals out of the field of view, centering on what appeared to be two small but bright galaxies touching or joined.
I went and read the instructions! All was then of course revealed and made perfect sense, the monitor view with 15 secs integration showed pretty much all the goodies in and around the target so I sketched before moving onto the larger but much fainter duo NGC 4411A and B that had caught my eye initially.
A different ball game, much tweaking of knobs trying to increase contrast so I could pull out more detail. I had no hope of seeing spiral structure the like of which was displayed so finely on the Webb web page. So I sketched all that I could make out and moved onto NGC 4567 and NGC 4568: Copeland's "Siamese twins" wow!
Why hadn't I been here before? Fantastic, these must be an Arp I thought, checked and no, really! Spent a while sketching these making sure that angles were about right on the paper. The screen view really was something, then I started to think the star I could see in the lower portion of the larger left-hand galaxy NGC 4568 I couldn't see in image I could pull up in Sky Map Pro, I looked in Bratton's no star there either! I will leave it at that as I quickly scanned and fired it off to Guy Hurst just in case I had struck lucky, I doubt it but you never know we all look at many galaxies, most off the beaten track, hopefully one of us will strike lucky one day :) At the time of writing I have not heard back from Guy but I'm not holding my breath, there is bound to be another explanation.
My penultimate target was M58, very close by the sketch in my Messier file was mediocre at best and made using the 14" back in 2009! With images tonight being good I would make a revisit. There was more detail to be had than my first sketch but this remain quite an elusive Messier for real intricate detail the outer arms are very tenuous!
Last stop because the outline in Sky Map pro looked so long and slender was NGC 4762 and it turned out to be a corker of an edge on, very sharp, especially the brighter inner region radiating from the core and the outer halo isn't too fat and fluffy so it doesn't detract from the spear like view of the galaxy, this is a real winner. close to 3 stars, 2 of them bright enough to show diffraction spikes, this must be a great target for the visual boys? The star to the right was just above a tiny goings on of very distant galaxies.
Brilliant session, time 01.30, eyes were burning, deffo time for bed, but sleep to a while to come as I was buzzing.
Dale Holt - (15 April 2020).