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M102

Spindle Galaxy

Galaxie Gut (55/100)

Lenticular

M102 Galaxy Draco Sichtbar Stufe 4 Large telescope (10"+) - Dark skies recommended
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Eigenschaften

Helligkeit 9.9
Winkelgröße 6.3′ × 2.7′
Positionswinkel 126°
Entfernung 52000000 ly
Galaxientyp Lenticular (S0)
Galaxy [Distance: 52000000 ly]

Position & Bezeichnungen

RA 15h 06m 29.5s
Dec +55° 45' 48.0"
Sternbild Draco
Katalog M102

Sichtbarkeit

Standort in den Benutzereinstellungen festlegen um Sichtbarkeitsdaten zu sehen.

Durchmusterungsbild

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Über M102

Beschreibung

The Spindle Galaxy (NGC 5866) is a lenticular galaxy in Draco, about 50 million light-years from Earth. It is seen nearly perfectly edge-on, presenting a thin, spindle-shaped disk bisected by a sharp, prominent dust lane. The galaxy spans about 60,000 light-years. The identity of M102 has been debated — it may be a duplicate observation of M101, but most modern catalogs identify it with NGC 5866.

Beobachtungstipps

Located about 2.5 degrees southwest of Iota Draconis. In a telescope it appears as a thin, bright streak with a prominent central bulge — one of the finest edge-on galaxies in the Messier catalog. The dark dust lane across the center is visible in 6-inch or larger telescopes under good conditions. The narrow, elegant profile makes it easy to identify. Best observed from April through August.

Geschichte

The history of M102 is tangled. Pierre Mechain reported it to Messier in 1781, but later claimed it was a duplicate of M101. However, the position Mechain gave better matches NGC 5866 (the Spindle Galaxy). Most modern Messier lists include NGC 5866 as M102.

Wissenswertes

The identity debate around M102 is one of astronomy's oldest catalog mysteries. If NGC 5866 is the correct identification, it is a beautiful edge-on lenticular galaxy with one of the sharpest dust lanes of any galaxy. Hubble images show the dust lane is thin, crisp, and extends slightly beyond the visible disk of stars.

Community-Fotos (1)

Credit: NASA, ESA, and The Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA). License: Public domain. (Wikimedia Commons)

Credit: NASA, ESA, and The Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA). License: Public domain. (Wikimedia Commons)

Skybred Feb 28, 2026