Messier 100

Spiral galaxy in the constellation Coma Berenicies From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Messier 100
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Messier 100 (also known as NGC 4321) is an example of a so-called 'grand design' spiral galaxy.[1] It is visible in the southern part of constellation Coma Berenices. Messier 100 is one of the brightest and largest galaxies in the Virgo cluster, about 55 million light-years away, with a diameter of 160,000 light years.[2] It was discovered by Pierre Méchain in 1781. Later it was entered in Messier’s catalogue of nebulae and star clusters after Charles Messier made observations of his own a month later.[3][4] The galaxy was one of the first spirals discovered,[3] and was listed as one of 14 spiral nebulae by the Earl of Rosse in 1850.

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Messier 100, by the European Southern Observatory
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Core of Messier 100 taken with the high resolution channel of Hubble's Advanced Camera for Surveys.

The galaxy has two satellite galaxies, NGC 4323 connected with M100 by a bridge of luminous matter and NGC 4328.[5][6]

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Star formation

Messier 100 is considered a starburst galaxy with a radius of 1 kilo-parsec, where star formation has been taking place for least 500 million years in separate bursts.[7] Star formation is concentrated in a ring actually two tightly wound spiral arms attached to a small nuclear bar.[8][9]

As usual on spiral galaxies of the Virgo Cluster, in the rest of the disk both star formation and neutral hydrogen are reduced in the galaxy's disk, something caused by interactions in the Virgo cluster.[10]

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Other Grand design spiral galaxies

References

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