Puneet Varma (Editor)

NGC 428

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Right ascension
  
01h 12m 55,78s

Distance
  
48 mly

Magnitude
  
11.3

Declination
  
+ 00 ° 58 '51.6

Apparent magnitude (V)
  
+11.3

Constellation
  
Cetus

NGC 428 httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Similar
  
NGC 210, NGC 201, NGC 151, NGC 54, NGC 274

NGC 428 is a barred spiral galaxy in the constellation of Cetus (The Sea Monster), with its spiral structure distorted and warped, possibly the result of the collision of two galaxies. There appears to be a substantial amount of star formation occurring within NGC 428 and lacks well defined arms — a telltale sign of a galaxy merger. In 2015 the Hubble Space Telescope made a close-up shot of the galaxy with its Advanced Camera for Surveys and its Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2. The structure of NGC 428 has been compared to NGC 5645.

Discoveries

NGC 428 was discovered by William Herschel in December 1786. A type Ia supernova designated SN2013ct was discovered May 11, 2013, within the galaxy by Stuart Parker of the Backyard Observatory Supernova Search (BOSS) project in Australia and New Zealand.

Smoker et al. reported in 1996 on the NGC 428 field, with the HI tail and LSB dwarf 0110+008, assessing star formation properties based on molecule density distributions, and concluded that the tail formation most likely originated through tidal interactions between two galaxies.

References

NGC 428 Wikipedia


Similar TopicsNGC 151
NGC 201
NGC 210