About Hamburger Galaxy
Description
NGC 3628 is a large edge-on spiral galaxy in Leo, about 35 million light-years away, forming the third member of the famous Leo Triplet along with M65 and M66. It is universally known as the Hamburger Galaxy for its unmistakable appearance: a thin, elongated disk bisected by a prominent dark dust lane — like a cosmic sesame bun. The galaxy's disk is distorted by gravitational interactions with M65 and M66, creating a long tidal tail extending some 300,000 light-years into intergalactic space (visible only in deep photographs). The Leo Triplet is one of the most-photographed galaxy groups in the northern sky.
Observing Tips
Part of a three-galaxy feast. In a 4-inch telescope at low power, all three members of the Leo Triplet fit in the same eyepiece field — a compact group of three distinct galaxies at different angles: M66 round and bright, M65 elongated and bright, and NGC 3628 a long thin streak. An 8-inch at 100-150x clearly shows the dark equatorial dust lane splitting NGC 3628 lengthwise — a stunning, almost photographic view. Larger apertures reveal subtle warping in the disk from the tidal interactions. The Triplet lies about 5 degrees east of Theta Leonis. Best observed February through May.
History
Discovered by William Herschel on April 8, 1784, the same night he recorded several other Leo galaxies. Why Messier missed NGC 3628 when he cataloged its neighbors M65 and M66 is another classic puzzle: M65 and M66 are at magnitude 9.3 and 8.9 respectively, only slightly brighter than NGC 3628 at 9.5, and they are all in the same field. Most historians suspect Messier simply didn't look long enough at the region. The 'Hamburger Galaxy' nickname emerged in mid-20th century amateur astronomy.
Fun Facts
NGC 3628's immense tidal tail was discovered in the 1970s in deep photographic plates — one of the first extragalactic tidal features convincingly imaged from the ground. The dark dust lane is a near-perfect example of the ubiquitous thin 'dust layer' present in the plane of spiral galaxies like our own Milky Way; we live in a similar lane, which is why the Milky Way appears banded across Earth's sky. Many astrophotographers consider the Leo Triplet the best three-for-one composition in the northern sky.
Observe
1Properties
Position & Identifiers
2How easy to spot?
| Telescope | Bortle 3 | Bortle 4 | Bortle 5 |
|---|---|---|---|
| 80 mm refractor 80mm refr. | Medium | Hard+ | Hard |
| 150 mm Newton 150mm Newt. | Medium | Medium | Medium |
| Celestron C8 (203 mm SCT) C8 203mm | Medium | Medium | Medium |
Bortle 3 = rural · 4 = outer suburbs · 5 = suburbs
3Visibility
Set a location in User Settings to see visibility data.
4
Eyepiece View
Hamburger Galaxy · 11.0′×3.4′ · N up, E left
Explore
5
Surface Brightness
6
Morphology Decoder
7
Inclination & True Shape
8
Redshift
9
Size Comparator
Discover
10
Light Travel Time Machine
11
Relativistic Travel
Survey Image
Loading survey image…
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.
Explore Nightbase
Related knowledge, tools, and stories — no observation planning required.