Suvarna Garge (Editor)

POX 186

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Right ascension
  
13 25 48.6

Redshift
  
0.003903

Apparent magnitude (V)
  
17.0

Magnitude
  
17

Declination
  
−11° 36′ 38″

Helio radial velocity
  
1170

Notable features
  
Blue compact galaxy

Constellation
  
Virgo

Similar
  
I Zwicky 18, NGC 1705, NGC 4567

POX 186 (also known as PGC 46982), located in the constellation Virgo, is a dwarf galaxy that is still forming. The galaxy is considered very small and distorted compared to most older galaxies, such as our own Milky Way Galaxy. It is currently believed to have first begun forming when two enormous clouds of gas and stars crashed into each other less than 100 million years ago, sparking new stars to form. Some people believe this may be direct evidence of a new theory, speculating that later-forming galaxies in our universe are smaller than galaxies that have been around for billions of years. POX 186 appears near the star Spica, the brightest star in Virgo.

References

POX 186 Wikipedia