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The Caldwell Objects

The Caldwell Objects

The Caldwell Objects

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38<br />

awe-inspiring experience has been branded into<br />

my mind, and to this day the sight of NGC 4565<br />

reminds me why I pursue the stars.<br />

Through small telescopes the galaxy is more<br />

pretty than awesome. Through the Genesis at 23x<br />

it is a long wafer of light oriented northwest to<br />

southeast. Two equally long threads of light<br />

extend from the galaxy's slightly swollen center,<br />

one on either side, like silk from a spider's<br />

abdomen. At 72x the galaxy's hub becomes more<br />

robust (a 13.5-magnitude star can be seen just<br />

northeast of it) and hints can be seen of the dark<br />

dust lane slicing<br />

152<br />

through the center. High power and patience<br />

provide the best view; that's when the dark lane<br />

cleanly divides the bright hub into two distinct<br />

ovals. <strong>The</strong> southwestern oval is punctuated by a<br />

bright point of light, which is probably the<br />

"nucleus" mentioned in the New General Catalogue.<br />

With time, the dark lane can be followed across<br />

the entirety of the galaxy's equator, though it is<br />

more prominent on the southeastern limb, where<br />

the border between light and dark has a slight<br />

waviness to it. Be aware that NGC 4562, a<br />

magnitude-13.5 galaxy, lies 13' southwest of NGC<br />

4565. This tiny glow<br />

Deep-Sky Companions: <strong>The</strong> <strong>Caldwell</strong> <strong>Objects</strong>

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