About NGC 2841
Description
NGC 2841 is the prototype of the flocculent spiral class — a galaxy in Ursa Major about 46 million light-years away whose spiral structure is composed of countless short, patchy fragments of arms rather than a single grand design. Its tightly wound, overall smooth appearance, threaded with delicate dust lanes and no dominant arm, has made it a textbook example in galaxy classification. The galaxy is large and luminous (similar to or larger than the Milky Way), with a prominent bright nucleus and a relatively quiescent disk. At magnitude 9.3 it is one of the finest galaxy targets in Ursa Major.
Observing Tips
A satisfying telescope object. A 4-inch at moderate power shows a small, bright nucleus surrounded by an elongated halo. An 8-inch at 150-200x reveals the disk's inclination clearly, with a sharp central condensation and hints of the dust lane silhouetted against the bright bulge. A 12-inch begins to mottle the disk and bring out the flocculent texture, but no obvious arms ever emerge — that smoothness is the point. Star-hop from Theta Ursae Majoris about 1.8 degrees southwest. Best observed February through May.
History
Discovered by William Herschel on 9 March 1788. NGC 2841 has been a key reference object in the long debate over how spiral arms form — its lack of a strong density-wave pattern motivated theoretical work on stochastic, self-propagating star formation as an alternative arm-generating mechanism in the 1970s.
Fun Facts
Despite its considerable size and luminosity, NGC 2841 has a very low ongoing star-formation rate — just a few tenths of a solar mass per year, an order of magnitude below the Milky Way. Its disk also contains very little neutral hydrogen for its mass, an unusual combination that has made it a recurring case study in 'red and dead' spiral evolution.
Observe
1Properties
Position & Identifiers
2How easy to spot?
| Telescope | Bortle 3 | Bortle 4 | Bortle 5 |
|---|---|---|---|
| 80 mm refractor 80mm refr. | Medium+ | Medium+ | Medium |
| 150 mm Newton 150mm Newt. | Easy | Easy | Easy |
| Celestron C8 (203 mm SCT) C8 203mm | Easy | Easy | Easy |
Bortle 3 = rural · 4 = outer suburbs · 5 = suburbs
3Visibility
Set a location in User Settings to see visibility data.
4
Eyepiece View
5
Best Magnification
Explore
6
Surface Brightness
7
Morphology Decoder
8
Inclination & True Shape
9
Redshift
10
Size Comparator
Discover
11
Light Travel Time Machine
12
Relativistic Travel
Nearby in the Sky
Other targets within a few degrees — pan your scope a little and keep exploring.
Visibility scores assume a 150 mm Newton at Bortle 4.
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