The Flickr Ngc4151 Image Generatr

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This page simply reformats the Flickr public Atom feed for purposes of finding inspiration through random exploration. These images are not being copied or stored in any way by this website, nor are any links to them or any metadata about them. All images are © their owners unless otherwise specified.

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NGC 4151 by Kwychang

© Kwychang, all rights reserved.

NGC 4151

Found in the constellation of Canes Venatici a mere 62 million light years away NGC 4151 has recieved the nickname 'Eye of Sauron'. This unusual spiral galaxy has an active black hole at it's core. This AGN (Active Galactic Nucleus) is one of the closest to us.
How many background galaxies can you count?

Data was gathered from my Bortle 7 back garden over 3 nights during the 1st week of April 2025. I had to delete half my subs due to guiding and star trailing issues.

Boring Techie bit:
Telescope: Skywatcher Quattro 8"
Mount: EQ6r pro
Camera: ZWO 533mc pro
Filter: Optolong UV/IR.
Guided and controlled by the ZWO asiair+ using Altair 60mm guide scope & ZWO 585mc.
60 light frames 180 seconds each.
Stacked with darks, flats, dark flats & bias using WBPP in PixInsight.
Processed using Graxpert, StarNet2, PixInsight & Affinity Photo.

Galaxy NGC 4151 by NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center

Available under a Creative Commons by-nc license

Galaxy NGC 4151

This 2011 image of NGC 4151 shows a close-up of the central region of the galaxy. The dimensions of the close-up are only 2,000 light years across. Here, the data from NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory are shown in blue, and we add in radio data from the VLA (purple) and HST data (yellow) showing oxygen emission. The linear structures show clear evidence for an earlier outburst from a supermassive black hole at the center of the galaxy.

Credit: X-ray: NASA/CXC/CfA/J.Wang et al.; Optical: Isaac Newton Group of Telescopes, La Palma/Jacobus Kapteyn Telescope, Radio: NSF/NRAO/VLA

#NASAMarshall #NASA #astrophysics #NASAChandra #NASA #blackhole #galaxy

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NGC4145, Eye of Sauron NGC4151 by ferri.andrea

© ferri.andrea, all rights reserved.

Eye of Sauron - NGC4151 crop by cfaobam

Available under a Creative Commons by license

Eye of Sauron - NGC4151 crop

Distance: ca.46 Mio. Lj

total exposure time: 25,5 hours

418x180s luminanz
32x180s red
30x180s green
31x180s blue

April 2019
March 2020

10" /f4 TS ONTC Carbon Tube Newtonian
ASI1600mmPro
Astrodon LRGB Filter
Skywatcher EQ8
Guiding TS9 OAG Lodestar

Processing: PixInsight/Capture One

A Seyfert Galaxy and Neighbors by Odonata457

© Odonata457, all rights reserved.

A Seyfert Galaxy and Neighbors

The Spiral Seyfert Galaxy, NGC 4151, has a bright center. Its nucleus is alive with activity. This Island Universe is interacting with other galaxies of which NGC 4145 and NGC 4156 are within a half of a degree. Adjacent to NGC 4151 is NGC 4156. At magnitude 13.0 this Barred Spiral Galaxy would normally not be within reach of my refractor from suburbia except that it has a very bright nucleus. The nucleus appeared star-like in the eyepiece, giving no hint that it was a galaxy. Just outside of the field of view of NGC 4151, about a half degree away, was NGC 4145. This quiet galaxy has only minimal new star formation. At magnitude 11.3 it appeared only as a faint soft glow showing no detail.

To see additional astronomy drawings visit: www.orrastrodrawing.com

NGC4151_SN2018aoq by René Lemoine

© René Lemoine, all rights reserved.

NGC4151_SN2018aoq

Distant supernova SN2018aoq in the spiral galaxy NGC4151.
The small white dot maked by the arrow is the supernova. The supernova was discovered on April 1st, 2018.

Picture data: Celestron 8" SC telescope with Starizona reducer. ST10XME camera, 17*120s exposure. No filter.

This is what Wikipedia says about the galaxy:

"NGC 4151 is an intermediate spiral Seyfert galaxy with weak inner ring structure located 19 megaparsecs (62 million light-years) from Earth in the constellation Canes Venatici. The galaxy was first mentioned by William Herschel on March 17, 1787.

It is one of the nearest galaxies to Earth to contain an actively growing supermassive black hole; it is speculated that the nucleus may host a binary black hole, with about 40 million and about 10 million solar masses respectively, orbiting with a 15.8-year period."

NGC 4151 by geckzilla

Available under a Creative Commons by license

NGC 4151

The brightly glowing bar portion of NGC 4151 as seen by Hubble. It is a Seyfert galaxy, which means that it has an actively accreting black hole at its nucleus, which presents itself to us as an intensely bright source. The two brighter portions near the top and bottom of the frame are where the bar terminates, and some fainter spiral arms extend outward from them. A widefield view of the galaxy by Adam Block is available to help with context: Click!

Mitchell Revalski of Georgia State University contacted me regarding the possibility of processing some of the objects he is using in his thesis, and I have been looking through the data to see what I can do. What's important in this galaxy are the brightly illuminated and glowing hydrogen clouds near the nucleus. They are a bit difficult to make out in this image because the narrowband filters required to highlight these structures were not available in a matching field of view, but some older WF/PC2 data of only the nucleus was available, so I made use of that in another image.

An article discussing this galaxy using a radio / visible / x-ray light image is available here: www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/chandra/multimedia/11-029.html

Data from the following proposal were used to create this image:
A Cepheid-Based Distance to the Benchmark AGN NGC 4151

Color saturation was greatly enhanced for the whole image.

Luminosity: WFC3/UVIS F350LP
Red: WFC3/UVIS F814W
Green: Pseudo
Blue: WFC3/UVIS F555W

North is NOT up. It is 30° counter-clockwise from up.

Active Nucleus of NGC 4151 by geckzilla

Available under a Creative Commons by license

Active Nucleus of NGC 4151

Note: Michell Revalski, an astronomer who studies these objects, has left comments on some of my images to add further details about what we're looking at! See here, or just scroll down.

This is an attempt to better highlight the glowing clouds of hydrogen being energized by some harsh light emitted by the central accreting black hole by using some of the narrowband data collected a while back with Hubble's WFPC2. If I understand correctly, the hydrogen gas is encircling the galaxy much as the rest of the stars and dust are doing, but is largely invisible at these wavelengths. When light from the black hole interacts with it, however, it then emits its own light, and becomes apparent.

A wider view of this galaxy is available here.

Data from the following proposals were used to create this image:
A Cepheid-Based Distance to the Benchmark AGN NGC 4151
Imaging and Spectrophotometry of Seyfert Nuclei (FOS 14): Cycle 4 Observations

Luminosity: WFC3/UVIS F350LP
Red: WFC3/UVIS F814W, WFPC2 F658N
Green: Pseudo
Blue: WFC3/UVIS F555W, WFPC2 F502N

North is NOT up. It is 30° counter-clockwise from up.

NGC 4151 Galaxy. Galaxies. Salt and Paper. #blackandwhitephotography #photographyeveryday #photography #iphone #salt #galaxies #ngc4151 by cadex herrera

© cadex herrera, all rights reserved.

NGC 4151 Galaxy. Galaxies. Salt and Paper. #blackandwhitephotography #photographyeveryday #photography #iphone #salt  #galaxies #ngc4151

Fireworks Near Galaxy NGC 4151 (STIS Optical) by trylabyte@att.net

© trylabyte@att.net, all rights reserved.

Fireworks Near Galaxy NGC 4151 (STIS Optical)

In this false colour image the two emission lines of oxygen gas (the weaker one at 4959 Angstroms and the stronger one at 5007 Angstroms) are clearly visible. The horizontal line passing through the image is from the light generated by the powerful black hole at the center of NGC 4151.

Galaxies NGC 4151 (Eye of Sauron) and NGC4145 in Canes Venatici by Oleg Bryzgalov

© Oleg Bryzgalov, all rights reserved.

Galaxies NGC 4151 (Eye of Sauron) and NGC4145  in Canes Venatici

NGC 4151 (or Eye of Sauron) is an intermediate spiral Seyfert galaxy located 43 million light years from Earth in the constellation Canes Venatici, discovered by William Herschel on March 17, 1787. It is one of the nearest galaxies to Earth to contain an actively-growing supermassive black hole. (Information: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NGC_4151)
Additional info here: www.space.com/11111-black-hole-eye-sauron-tolkien.html

This picture was photographed during May, 2012 in Khlepcha observatory, Ukraine.
Equipment: reflector S&D 254 mm. f/4.7
Mount WhiteSwan-180, camera QSI-583wsg, Tevevue Paracorr-2. Off-axis guidecamera Orion SSAG.
LRGB filter set Baader Planetarium.
L=19*450 sec. + 11*600 sec. bin1. RGB: 11*450-600 sec. bin2.
Processed Pixinsight 1.7 and Photoshop CS5.

n4151 by Astronomi Diyarı

© Astronomi Diyarı, all rights reserved.

n4151

Sauron’un Gözü ya da NGC 4151.
www.astronomidiyari.com/?p=3580

See more:

The 'Eye of Sauron' (NASA, Chandra, 03/10/11) by NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center

Available under a Creative Commons by-nc license

The 'Eye of Sauron' (NASA, Chandra, 03/10/11)

This composite image shows the central region of the spiral galaxy NGC 4151, dubbed the "Eye of Sauron" by astronomers for its similarity to the eye of the malevolent character in "The Lord of the Rings". In the "pupil" of the eye, X-rays (blue) from the Chandra X-ray Observatory are combined with optical data (yellow) showing positively charged hydrogen ("H II") from observations with the 1-meter Jacobus Kapteyn Telescope on La Palma. The red around the pupil shows neutral hydrogen detected by radio observations with the NSF's Very Large Array. This neutral hydrogen is part of a structure near the center of NGC 4151 that has been distorted by gravitational interactions with the rest of the galaxy, and includes material falling towards the center of the galaxy. The yellow blobs around the red ellipse are regions where star formation has recently occurred.

A recent study has shown that the X-ray emission was likely caused by an outburst powered by the supermassive black hole located in the white region in the center of the galaxy. Evidence for this idea comes from the elongation of the X-rays running from the top left to the bottom right and details of the X-ray spectrum. There are also signs of interactions between a central source and the surrounding gas, particularly the yellow arc of H II emission located above and to the left of the black hole.

Two different scenarios to explain the X-ray emission have been proposed. One possibility is that the central black hole was growing much more quickly about 25,000 years ago (in Earth's time frame) and the radiation from the material falling onto the black hole was so bright that it stripped electrons away from the atoms in the gas in its path. X-rays were then emitted when electrons recombined with these ionized atoms.

The second possibility also involved a substantial inflow of material into the black hole relatively recently. In this scenario the energy released by material flowing into the black hole in an accretion disk created a vigorous outflow of gas from the surface of the disk. This outflowing gas directly heated gas in its path to X-ray emitting temperatures. Unless the gas is confined somehow, it would expand away from the region in less than 100,000 years. In both of these scenarios, the relatively short amount of time since the last episode of high activity by the black hole may imply such outbursts occupy at least about 1% of the black hole's lifetime.

NGC 4151 is located about 43 million light years away from the Earth and is one of the nearest galaxies which contains an actively growing black hole. Because of this proximity, it offers one of the best chances of studying the interaction between an active supermassive black hole and the surrounding gas of its host galaxy. Such interaction, or "feedback", is recognized to play a key role in the growth of supermassive black holes and their host galaxies. If the X-ray emission in NGC 4151 originates from hot gas heated by the outflow from the central black hole, it would be strong evidence for feedback from active black holes to the surrounding gas on galaxy scales. This would resemble the larger scale feedback, observed on galaxy cluster scales, from active black holes interacting with the surrounding gas, as seen in objects like the Perseus Cluster.

Credit: X-ray: NASA/CXC/CfA/J.Wang et al.; Optical: Isaac Newton Group of Telescopes, La Palma/Jacobus Kapteyn Telescope, Radio: NSF/NRAO/VLA

Read entire caption/view more images: chandra.harvard.edu/photo/2011/n4151/

Caption credit: Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics

Read more about Chandra:
www.nasa.gov/chandra

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