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M84

NGC 4374

Galaxy Virgo Mag 9.1

Objektdaten

Katalogbezeichnung
M84
Typ
Galaxy
Sternbild
Virgo
Helligkeit
9.1
Rektaszension
12h 25m 03.7s
Deklination
+12° 53' 13.0"
Entfernung
97,600,000 Lichtjahre
Winkelgröße
5.0
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Über M84

Beschreibung

M84 is a giant elliptical (or lenticular) galaxy in Virgo, about 60 million light-years from Earth. It lies at the heart of the Virgo Cluster, along the famous Markarian's Chain — a curved string of galaxies visible in a single telescope field. M84 harbors a supermassive black hole of about 1.5 billion solar masses and produces two powerful radio jets.

Beobachtungstipps

Located at the beginning of Markarian's Chain, a beautiful arc of galaxies extending east from M84 and M86. In a telescope, M84 appears as a bright, round, featureless glow close to M86. The two galaxies and several fainter ones form one of the most spectacular galaxy fields in amateur astronomy. Use low power (50-60x) to fit the chain into the field. Best observed from March through June.

Geschichte

Discovered by Charles Messier on March 18, 1781. The Markarian's Chain in which it resides was described by Armenian astrophysicist Benjamin Markarian in 1961. Hubble Space Telescope observations revealed a fast-rotating gas disk around the central black hole.

Wissenswertes

M84's central black hole was one of the first to be confirmed through Hubble spectroscopy, which showed gas orbiting at speeds of 400 km/s. The galaxy emits two powerful radio jets visible in radio telescope images. M84 and M86 together anchor Markarian's Chain — arguably the most photogenic galaxy chain accessible to amateur telescopes.

Community-Fotos (1)

Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA. License: CC BY 4.0. (Wikimedia Commons)

Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA. License: CC BY 4.0. (Wikimedia Commons)

Skybred Feb 28, 2026