A1689B11

A1689B11 is an extremely old spiral galaxy located in the Abell 1689 galaxy cluster in the Virgo constellation.[2] The disk of A1689B11 is cool and thin, yet it produced stars at thirty times the rate of the Milky Way. A1689B11 is 11 billion light years from the Earth, forming 2.6 billion years after the Big Bang. It one of the most distant known spiral galaxies as of 2017.[3][1]

A1689B11
Observation data (J2000 epoch)
ConstellationVirgo
Right ascension13h 11m 33.336s[1]
Declination−01° 21 06.9[1]
Redshift2.540[1]
Heliocentric radial velocity761,473 km/s (473,157 mi/s)
Galactocentric velocity761,400 km/s (473,100 mi/s)
Distance11 billion ly (3.4 billion pc) (light travel distance)
19.4 billion ly (5.9 billion pc)
(comoving distance)
Apparent magnitude (V)24
Characteristics
TypeS[1]
Mass1010.2 (dynamical)[1]
109.8 ± 0.3 (stellar)[1] M
Apparent size (V)5200 pc (17 kly)
Half-light radius (physical)2600 ± 700 pc[1]
Other designations
BBC2005 11.1, [BBC2005] Source 11

See also

  • BX442, another old and distant spiral galaxy
  • BRI 1335-0417, another old and distant spiral galaxy

References

  1. Tiantian Yuan; Johan Richard; Anshu Gupta; Christoph Federrath; Soniya Sharma; Brent A. Groves; Lisa J. Kewley; Renyue Cen; Yuval Birnboim; David B. Fisher (30 October 2017). "The most ancient spiral galaxy: a 2.6-Gyr-old disk with a tranquil velocity field". The Astrophysical Journal. 850 (1): 61. arXiv:1710.11130. Bibcode:2017ApJ...850...61Y. doi:10.3847/1538-4357/aa951d. S2CID 119267114.
  2. "[BBC2005] Source 11 -- Galaxy". 24 June 2018.
  3. "The most ancient spiral galaxy confirmed". PhysOrg. 3 November 2017.


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