A giant elliptical galaxy, M87 (NGC 4486)
AAO image reference AAT 60.    « Previous || Next »

Messier 87 (NGC 4486) and its globular clusters in the Virgo cluster, m87.jpg, ngc4486.jpg
Top left is NE. Image width is about 8 arc min
Image and text © 1987-2002, Anglo-Australian Observatory, photograph by David Malin.


Messier 87 (NGC 4486) is at the heart of the Virgo cluster and has a mass many times that of the Milky Way, itself no lightweight. Unlike our galaxy however, M87 is an elliptical galaxy. Though it appears more-or-less spherical on this photograph, a deep image shows it to be markedly elongated. Also unlike the Milky Way, M87 contains relatively little gas and dust. It is composed mainly of cool stars, which gives it a yellowish colour, in contrast to the blue of spiral galaxies. Despite the lack of star-forming materials, M87 is not a quiescent backwater. It is a powerful source of radio waves and the orbits of stars near its nucleus suggest they are held by a very massive, extremely compact core. Also, from the nucleus (but not seen here) extends a curious jet, all of which suggests that a massive black hole is hidden in the bright core of the galaxy. Click here for bigger image.

Entry from NGC 2000.0 (R.W. Sinnott, Ed.) © Sky Publishing Corporation, 1988:
NGC 4486  Gx 12 30.8  +12 24 s  Vir7.28.6  vB, vL, R, mbM, 3rd of 3; = M87


More data about this galaxy is accessible from the hotlinked NGC name and is reproduced
with permission from the NASA/IPAC Extragalactic Database (NED).

Related Images
AAT 53 .   Messier 87 (NGC 4486) and its globular clusters
UKS 31.    M84, M86 and M87, and Markarian's Chain in Virgo
n4486_d    NGC 4486 (M87), deep image

For details of photographic exposure, search technical table by AAT reference number.

Image availability: Photo Print

galaxies | emission neb. | reflection neb. | dark neb. | planetaries | clusters | stars | supernovae
50 Favorites | Messier objects | DMI | Repro conditions | AAO images page | AAO site overview