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NGC 300

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

A stunning view of the NGC 300 galaxy captured by the Hubble Space Telescope, showing countless stars in beautiful detail.

NGC 300, also known as Caldwell 70 or the Sculptor Pinwheel Galaxy, is a beautiful spiral galaxy in the constellation Sculptor. It was found on 5 August 1826 by a Scottish astronomer named James Dunlop. This galaxy is one of the closest to our Local Group of galaxies. It is thought to be between the Local Group and the Sculptor Group.

NGC 300 is the brightest of the five main spiral galaxies in the direction of the Sculptor Group. From Earth, it looks tilted at an angle of 42 degrees. This galaxy has many features like the Triangulum Galaxy. It is about 94,000 light-years wide, which is smaller than our own Milky Way. Scientists think NGC 300 has a mass of about (2.9 ± 0.2) × 1010 times the mass of the Sun.

Nearby galaxies and group information

NGC 300 and the Magellanic type barred spiral galaxy NGC 55 were once thought to be part of the Sculptor Group, a group of galaxies. But newer measurements show that these two galaxies are closer to us and likely move together as a pair.

The small galaxy called Sculptor C is about 6.65 million light-years from the Sun and is probably a smaller galaxy orbiting NGC 300. Its brightness is similar to other small galaxies found recently.

Distance estimates

In 1986, an astronomer named Allan Sandage thought NGC 300 was about 5.41 million light-years away. In 1992, other scientists updated this to about 6.9 million light-years. By 2006, the distance was refined to about 7 million light-years. Different methods helped scientists get better measurements. Today, scientists believe NGC 300 is roughly 6.07 million light-years from us.

Allan Sandage Mly Mpc tip of the red giant branch Cepheid variables

Transient Events

NGC 300 zoom-in by the Hubble Space Telescope

Astronomers have seen bright flashes of light from the galaxy NGC 300. These flashes happen when stars explode or change how bright they are.

One well-known flash, called NGC 300-OT, was spotted in 2008 by an amateur astronomer. It shone very brightly for a short time and then slowly faded. Scientists studied this flash and learned it was caused by a special kind of exploding star. More flashes have been found since then, showing how active this galaxy is.

Astronomical objects

NGC 300, also called Caldwell 70 or the Sculptor Pinwheel Galaxy, has many interesting stars and objects. One special place in NGC 300 is called NGC 300 X-1. Scientists think it might be two stars orbiting each other very closely — one is a big, hot star, and the other could be a black hole.

There is also a rare and hot star in NGC 300 called STWR 13. It shines brightly in one of the galaxy's busy star-making areas.

Images

A colorful view of the spiral galaxy NGC 300, showing young blue stars in its arms and older stars in its center.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on NGC 300, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

Images from Wikimedia Commons. Tap any image to view credits and license.