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Messier 58
Spiral Galaxy
M58 (NGC 4579), type SBc, in
Virgo
| Right Ascension |
12 : 37.7 (h:m)
|
| Declination |
+11 : 49 (deg:m)
|
| Distance |
60000 (kly)
|
| Visual Brightness |
9.7 (mag)
|
| Apparent Dimension |
5.5x4.5 (arc min)
|
Discovered 1779 by Charles Messier.
Messier 58 (M58, NGC 4579) is one of the four barred spiral galaxies in
Messier's catalog (the others are
M91,
M95,and
M109), although it
is sometimes classified as intermediate between normal and barred spirals
(e.g., in R. Brent Tully's Nearby Galaxies Catalog). It is one of the
brightest galaxies in the
Virgo cluster.
Charles Messier discovered M58, together with the apparently nearby
elliptical galaxies
M59 and M60,
on the occasion of following the comet of 1779, and
cataloged it on April 15, 1779. M58 is one of the earliest recognized
spiral galaxies, and listed by
Lord Rosse
as one of 14 "spiral nebulae" discovered to 1850.
Smaller telescopes let it look similar to the Virgo ellipticals, showing
only its bright nucleus. Under good conditions, 4-inch or larger scopes show
a halo of uneven brightness with condensations which seem to coincide with
brighter areas of the spiral arms. A suggestion of M58's bar may be noticed
with telescopes starting from 8-inch, as an "extension of the central
nucleus in an EW direction" (Kenneth Glyn Jones).
Two supernovae have been observed in M58: the type II supernova 1988A,
found by Ikeya on January 18, 1988, 40" south of the nucleus at mag 13.5,
and the type I supernova 1989M, discovered by Kimeridze on June 28, 1989 at
mag 12.2 and 33"N, 44"W of M58's center.
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