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Messier 110
Elliptical Galaxy
M110 (NGC 205), type E6p, in
Andromeda
A Satellite of the Andromeda Galaxy, M31
| Right Ascension |
00 : 40.4 (h:m)
|
| Declination |
+41 : 41 (deg:m)
|
| Distance |
2900 (kly)
|
| Visual Brightness |
8.5 (mag)
|
| Apparent Dimension |
17x10 (arc min)
|
Discovered by Charles Messier in 1773.
Messier 110 (M110, NGC 205) is the second brighter satellite galaxy of
the Andromeda galaxy
M31, together with
M32, and thus a member of the
Local Group.
Curiously, this galaxy was discovered by
Charles Messier on August 10, 1773, as
described in the Connaissance des Tems for 1801, and depicted on
his
fine drawing of the "Great Andromeda Nebula" and its companions
published in 1807. However, Messier did never himself include this object in
his catalog, due to unknown reasons, perhaps a certain sloppiness in
recording. It was the last
additional object,
added finally by
Kenneth Glyn
Jones in 1966. Independent of Messier's discovery,
Caroline Herschel independently
discovered M110 on August 27, 1783, little more than 10 years after
Messier, and
William
Herschel numbered it H V.18 when he
cataloged it on October 5, 1784.
The small elliptical galaxy M110 is at about the same distance as the
Andromeda galaxy M31, about 2.9 million light years, as confirmed by Walter
Baade in 1944, when he resolved it into stars (Baade
1944). It is of Hubble type E5 or E6 and is designated "peculiar"
because it shows some unusual dark structure (probably dust clouds). M110 is
now often classified as a dwarf spheroidal galaxy, not a generic elliptical
one (this would make it the first ever known dwarf spheroid, of course).
However, as it is much brighter than typical dwarf spheroids, Sidney van dan
Bergh has recently introduced the term "Spheroidal Galaxy" for this and
similar galaxies, including Local Group members
NGC 147 and
NGC 185.
M110's mass was estimated to be between 3.6 and 15 billion solar masses.
Apparently, despite its comparatively small size, this dwarf elliptical
galaxy has also a remarkable system of 8 globular clusters in a halo around
it. The brightest of them, G73, is of about 15th magnitude and thus within
the reach of large amateur telescopes; Steve Gottlieb has observed it with a
44-cm telescope together with
M31 globulars, and amateurs at the Ferguson Observatory near Kenwood, CA
obtained a CCD image showing 7 of them with their 14-inch Newtonian and
CB245 CCD camera (via the
M31 GC images page).
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