Harman Patil (Editor)

NGC 125

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Right ascension
  
00 28 50.2

Type
  
(R)SA0+P

Magnitude
  
12.9

Apparent magnitude (V)
  
12.9

Declination
  
+02° 50′ 24″

Apparent size (V)
  
1.70′ x 1.5′

Constellation
  
Pisces

NGC 125

Redshift
  
6998177220000000000♠0.017722

Helio radial velocity
  
7006526600000000000♠5266 km/s

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NGC 126, NGC 127, NGC 130, NGC 137

NGC 125 (also known as PGC 1772) is a lenticular galaxy located in the constellation Pisces. It is designated as subclass Sa Ring in the galaxy morphological classification scheme. It lies approximately 235 million light-years away.

Contents

Discovery

NGC 125 was discovered by astronomer William Herschel on 25 December 1790 and viewed with a reflecting telescope with an aperture of 18.7 inches. At the time of discovery, its coordinates were recorded as 00h 21m 41s, +87° 56.1′ -20.0″. It was also observed 12 October 1827 by John Herschel.

Visual appearance

Dreyer described NGC 125 as "very faint" and "small," with a "brighter middle." It is about 115 thousand light-years across, making it slightly larger than the Milky Way galaxy.

Galaxy group information

NGC 125 is part of the NGC 128 group, which includes NGC 125, NGC 126, NGC 127, NGC 128, and NGC 130. Though they are in the same galaxy group, the >1000 km/h difference in recessional velocities between NGC 125 and NGC 128 make it unlikely that they are near in space to each other; however, because of their similar redshifts, NGC 125 and NGC 126 are most likely close.

References

NGC 125 Wikipedia