NGC 5920 | |
---|---|
Observation data | |
Constellation | Serpens |
Right ascension | 230.4661250 degree |
Declination | 7.7088806 degree |
Redshift | 0.04419 |
Heliocentric radial velocity | 13,584 km/s |
Distance | 712 Mly (218.3 Mpc) |
Group or cluster | MKW 3 |
Apparent magnitude (V) | 13.855 0.002 |
Characteristics | |
Type | Radio galaxy, BCG |
Size | 300,000 ly |
Other designations | |
PGC 54839, UGC 9822, LEDA 54839, 4C 07.41, Z 49-145, FIRST J152151.85+074231, PKS 1519+07, 3C 318.1 |
NGC 5920 is a large lenticular galaxy located in the Serpens constellation.[1][2][3] Discovered on March 30th 1887 by American astronomer Lewis Swift,[4] NGC 5920 is 711 million light-years distant from planet Earth.[5] It is a narrow-line radio galaxy[6] and about 300,000 light-years in diameter.
NGC 5920 has an active galactic nucleus. It presents a radio jet. In addition, it hosts a radio source in its core called 3C 318.1, indicating emissions of strong radio waves.[7] NGC 5920 was studied by Chandra-MUSE, in which X-ray and optical filament analysis in clusters were carried out.[8] The main purpose for this was to find the excitation process responsible for increased filament emission. The research was further improved by following the cold gas phase and through study of intensive ratios in emission lines that caused the excitation. Researchers found that, there was a spatial connection between the filaments that are cold and having lower metal abundance levels.[8]
NGC 5920 is the brightest cluster galaxy of a small galaxy cluster which is known as MKW 3.[9] Apart from it, another radio galaxy NGC 5919, is also located there.[4]