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Post Info TOPIC: Arp 147


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RE: Arp 147
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Chandra/Hubble Image of Arp 147

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PGC 11890
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Arp 147 (also known as IC 298, IRAS 03087+0107, MCG 0-9-16 and PGC 11890) is an magnitude +14.3 interacting pair of ring galaxies located 433 million to 440 million light-years away in the constellation Cetus.

The system was originally was discovered by French astronomer Stéphane Javelle using a 30 in (77 cm) refractor telescope at the Nice Observatory on the 29th December 1893, and is listed in the Atlas of Peculiar Galaxies.

Right ascension 03h 11m 18.90s, Declination +01° 18' 52.99"



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Title: SWIFT Observations of the Arp 147 Ring galaxy system
Authors: Lisa Fogarty, Niranjan Thatte, Matthias Tecza, Fraser Clarke, Timothy Goodsall, Ryan Houghton, Graeme Salter, Roger Davies, Susan Kassin

We present observations of Arp 147, a galaxy system comprising a collisionally-created ring galaxy and an early-type galaxy, using the Oxford SWIFT integral field spectrograph (IFS) at the 200-inch Hale telescope. We derive spatially resolved kinematics from the IFS data and use these to study the interaction between the two galaxies. We find the edge-to-edge expansion velocity of the ring is 225 ±8 km/s, implying an upper limit on the timescale for the collision of 50 Myrs. We also calculate that the angle of impact for the collision is between 33 degrees-54 degrees, where 0 degrees would imply a perpendicular collision. The ring galaxy is strongly star-forming with the star formation likely to have been triggered by the collision between the two galaxies. We measure some key physical parameters in an integrated and spatially resolved manner for the ring galaxy. Using observed B-I colours and the H-alpha equivalent widths, we conclude that two stellar components (a young and an old population) are required to simultaneously match both observed quantities. We constrain the age range, light and mass fractions of the young star formation in the ring, finding a modest age range, a light fraction of less than a third, and a negligible (<1%) mass fraction. We postulate that the redder colours observed in the SE corner of the ring galaxy could correspond to the nuclear bulge of the original disk galaxy from which the ring was created, consistent with the stellar mass in the SE quadrant being 30-50% of the total. The ring appears to have been a typical disk galaxy prior to the encounter. The ring shows electron densities consistent with typical values for star-forming HII regions. The eastern half of the ring exhibits a metallicity a factor of ~2 higher than the western half. The ionisation parameter, measured across the ring, roughly follows the previously observed trend with metallicity.

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Arp 147: Giant Ring of Black Holes

arp147_xray.jpg
Credit      X-ray: NASA/CXC/MIT/S.Rappaport et al

Just in time for Valentine's Day comes a new image of a ring -- not of jewels -- but of black holes. This composite image of Arp 147, a pair of interacting galaxies located about 430 million light years from Earth, shows X-rays from the NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory (pink) and optical data from the Hubble Space Telescope (red, green, blue) produced by the Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) in Baltimore, Md.
Arp 147 contains the remnant of a spiral galaxy (right) that collided with the elliptical galaxy on the left. This collision has produced an expanding wave of star formation that shows up as a blue ring containing in abundance of massive young stars. These stars race through their evolution in a few million years or less and explode as supernovas, leaving behind neutron stars and black holes.

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Position (J2000):      RA 03h 11m 18.9s | Dec +01° 18' 52.99''

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