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Latest Info
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Sun Situation


Moon Phase

CLICK HERE - Viewing Situation
at the Briars Viewing
Centre

 

NGC253

NGC253 - Sculptor Galaxy

The Sculptor Galaxy (NGC 253) is an intermediate spiral galaxy in the constellation Sculptor. The Sculptor Galaxy is a starburst galaxy, which means that it is currently undergoing a period of intense star formation.

The galaxy was discovered by Caroline Herschel in 1783 while doing one of her systematic comet searches. About a half century later, John Herschel while at the Cape of Good Hope observed it using his 18 inch metallic mirror reflector. He then wrote "very bright and large (24′ in length); a superb object.... Its light is somewhat streaky, but I see no stars in it except 4 large and one very small one, and these seem not to belong to it, there being many near..."

In 1961, Allan Sandage wrote in the Hubble Atlas of Galaxies that the Sculptor Galaxy is "the prototype example of a special subgroup of Sc systems....photographic images of galaxies of the group are dominated by the dust pattern. Dust lanes and patches of great complexity are scattered throughout the surface. Spiral arms are often difficult to trace.... The arms are defined as much by the dust as by the spiral pattern." B. Y. Mills, working out of Sydney, discovered that the Sculptor Galaxy is also a fairly strong radio source.
(From Wikipedia, the free encyclopaedia)

 

Information

bulletInstrument: W.O. FLT132
bulletMount: Vixen New Atlux
bulletExposure: 3 x 10 Minutes (Luminance Only)
bulletCamera: SBIG STL11k
bulletSensitivity: N/A
bulletDate: October 24, 2008
bulletExposure start: 11PM
bulletLocation: Cranbourne, Vic
bulletAutoguider: Self Guiding through SBIG's guide CCD
bulletEnhancement: None (All in CCD-Soft)

Notes: None.

 
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Moon
Eta Carina
Jewel box
M16
M8 + M20
NGC2024
NGC1977
NGC253
NGC2070
M42
NGC4755
NGC1532
NGC2238
M104
M83
Helix
Veil
M16 in Narrowband

Public Viewing Nights 

Just to let everyone know, public viewing nights are held every first Friday of the month. Clear or cloudy nights the public viewing night goes ahead. Members man a number of telescopes of various sizes and types, and for those nights where the sky is cloudy, extended astronomical presentations are presented in the MPAS Viewing Centre.

So please come along and enjoy our nights sky.

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In 2011 MPAS
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