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NGC 2903 — Galáxia em Leão

Galáxia Excelente (71/100)

Barred Spiral

Magnitude 8.9m Galaxy Leão (Leo) Visível
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Sobre NGC 2903

Descrição

NGC 2903 is a large, bright barred spiral galaxy in the constellation Leo, about 30 million light-years away. At magnitude 8.9 and spanning nearly 12 arcminutes, it is one of the brightest galaxies not included in Charles Messier's catalog — an oversight that has earned it the informal title of 'the galaxy Messier missed.' It has a well-defined central bar, a bright core, and loosely wound spiral arms studded with bright H II regions. Its luminosity is comparable to the Milky Way's, making it a near-twin in many respects: a spiral of similar size, similar stellar content, and active ongoing star formation in its nuclear region.

Dicas de Observação

A splendid galaxy target. In binoculars it is visible from dark skies as a faint elongated smudge; a 4-inch telescope at 80-120x shows a clear central concentration with a surrounding diffuse halo. An 8-inch at 150-200x under dark skies shows the bar clearly, with hints of the inner spiral arms curling outward. A 12-inch or larger begins to reveal individual H II regions as tiny brighter knots. The galaxy lies about 1.5 degrees south of Lambda Leonis, an easy naked-eye star marking the lion's head. Best observed February through May.

História

Discovered by William Herschel on November 16, 1784. Why Messier missed it — given its brightness and Northern Hemisphere location — is a classic amateur-astronomy question. The most plausible answer is simply that Messier's catalog was driven by the search for comets, and the region around NGC 2903 was not where he happened to be looking at the right time. Herschel described it as 'very brilliant' and noted its strongly elongated shape. Modern observations have confirmed its barred spiral classification and its active nuclear starburst.

Curiosidades

NGC 2903 is routinely used by amateur astronomers as a test object — 'if you can see NGC 2903 from your site, your skies are dark enough for serious galaxy work.' Its nuclear region hosts a cluster of young massive star clusters visible in infrared imagery, suggesting an intense recent starburst triggered by inflows along the central bar. Many experienced observers consider NGC 2903 one of the finest galaxies in the northern sky — and argue, a bit tongue-in-cheek, that it deserves an honorary Messier number.

Observar

1Propriedades

Magnitude 8.9
Tamanho Angular 11.9′ × 5.3′
Ângulo de Posição 22°
Distância 25.91 million ly
Tipo de Galáxia Barred Spiral (SBbc)
cB, vL, E, gmbM, r, sp of 2

Posição e Identificadores

RA 09h 32m 12.0s
Dec +21° 30' 00.0"
Constelação Leão (Leo)
Catálogo NGC 2903

2Facilidade de observação

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Telescópio Bortle 3 Bortle 4 Bortle 5
Refr. 80mm Fácil Fácil Médio+
Newt. 150mm Fácil Fácil Fácil
C8 203mm Fácil Fácil Fácil
Fácil Médio Difícil Muito difícil Impossível

Bortle 3 = rural · 4 = suburbano · 5 = urbano

Fácil com Seestar S50

3Visibilidade

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Melhor temporada Jan – Mar (peak: Feb)

4 Vista pela Ocular

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125x CV real: 0.4° Mag. lim.: 13.6
N E

NGC 2903 · 11.9′×5.3′ · N cima, L esquerda

5 Melhor Ampliação

Explorar

6 Brilho superficial

7 Decodificador de morfologia

8 Inclinação e forma real

9 Desvio para o vermelho

10 Comparador de tamanho

Descobrir

11

Máquina do tempo da luz

12

Viagem Relativística

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