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M64

NGC 4826

Galaxy Excellent (71/100)

Spiral

NGC 4826 Galaxy Com Visible Level 3 Medium telescope (6-8") - Dark skies recommended
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Properties

Magnitude 8.5
Angular Size 10.5′ × 5.3′
Position Angle 114°
Galaxy Type Spiral (SAab)
! vB, vL, vmE 120deg +/- , bMSBN; = M64

Position & Identifiers

RA 12h 56m 42.0s
Dec +21° 40' 60.0"
Constellation Com
Catalog NGC 4826

Visibility

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Eyepiece View

80x TFOV: 0.6° Lim. mag: 14.2
N E

M64 · 10.5′×5.3′ · N up, E left

Surface Brightness & Visibility

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About M64

Description

The Black Eye Galaxy is a spiral galaxy in Coma Berenices, about 24 million light-years from Earth. It is famous for the spectacular dark band of dust in front of the galaxy's bright nucleus, giving it the appearance of a black eye. M64 has an unusual internal structure: the outer gas disk rotates in the opposite direction to the inner disk, likely the result of a past merger.

Observing Tips

Located about 1 degree east-northeast of 35 Comae Berenices. In a 4-inch telescope the galaxy appears as a bright oval with a concentrated core. The dark dust band (the 'black eye') becomes visible in 6-inch or larger telescopes on one side of the nucleus. An 8-inch under good conditions shows it clearly. The galaxy is relatively bright and rewarding for its unique appearance. Best observed from March through July.

History

Discovered by Edward Pigott on March 23, 1779 — just 12 days before Johann Elert Bode independently found it. Charles Messier cataloged it on March 1, 1780. Its dark band was noted by William Herschel, leading to the 'Black Eye' nickname.

Fun Facts

The counter-rotating gas disks in M64 are believed to result from the absorption of a smaller companion galaxy about one billion years ago. At the boundary where the two gas disks meet and collide, a ring of intense star formation is occurring. This makes M64 a galaxy that is both old and actively forming new stars.