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NGC 4571
Galaxy in the constellation Coma Berenices From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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NGC 4571 is a spiral galaxy located in the constellation of Coma Berenices that William Herschel thought was Messier 91 in Charles Messier's catalog of deep-sky objects,[2] before nearly two centuries later that object was determined to be the nearby barred spiral galaxy NGC 4548.
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Physical properties
The finding of Cepheids by the Canada France Hawaii Telescope in 1994 has established that this galaxy is a member of the Virgo Cluster.[2]
Despite being classified as a late-type galaxy, NGC 4571 has features more typical of spiral galaxies of earlier Hubble type such as a high color index, both low star formation rate and H-Alpha brightness, and relatively little neutral hydrogen,[3] suggesting it may have lost most of its gas due to interactions with Virgo's intragalactic medium and/or past interactions with other galaxies of the cluster.[4][5][6]
The low-surface brightness galaxy Malin 1 is located close to this object.[7] It is totally unrelated, however as it lies at a much higher distance.
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Gallery
- NGC 4571 by Hubble Space Telescope
- NGC 4571 (SDSS DR14)
References
External links
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