Messier 49 (NGC 4472): The Brightest Galaxy of the Virgo Cluster

Messier 49 (M49 and NGC 4472) happens to be the brightest galaxy in the Virgo Cluster. It’s also the brightest galaxies amateur astronomers can view from the backyard. Learn more of this large elliptical galaxy viewable as a hazy patch of light from the suburbs.

Messier 84 (NGC 4374): A Cotton Ball in a Field of Many

Messier 84 (M84), also designated as NGC 4374, lies in the springtime sky amongst the plethora of viewable galaxies in Virgo. Using a small scope, one can also find it among the array of galaxies in the Virgo Cluster and the stretch of galaxies in Markarian’s Chain. It looks a faint smudge in small to mid-sized scopes from the backyard.

Spica: Beautiful Blue Light of the Spring Night

On spring nights, the solitary blue star Spica rises in the eastern sky standing seemingly alone in the constellation Virgo. Spica will always be a special star to me. You see, in my teenage years, I stayed up into the early morning hours to catch a last glimpse of the Orion Nebula and other deepContinueContinue reading “Spica: Beautiful Blue Light of the Spring Night”

Gamma Virginis “Porrima”: Twins Pulling Apart

Not far from Virgo’s beautiful blue Spica is the double star Gamma Virginis. Also known as Porrima, this star is the second brightest in the springtime constellation of Virgo. At first glance, from a suburban location with light pollution, Porrima appears as a dim, white star. However, looking through the telescope, one will find twoContinueContinue reading “Gamma Virginis “Porrima”: Twins Pulling Apart”

Messier 60 (NGC 4649): Hubble’s Fastest Moving Galaxy

Messier 60 is a giant elliptical galaxy in the Virgo constellation. It’s best viewed in spring. According to NASA, M60 has a diameter of 120,000 light-years and is as massive as one trillion suns. At its center is a supermassive black hole with a mass 4.5 billion times that of our sun. It’s easy toContinueContinue reading “Messier 60 (NGC 4649): Hubble’s Fastest Moving Galaxy”

Messier 86 (NGC 4406): A Galaxy Not Running Away

Astronomers are unsure which is the best description for Messier 86 as it falls between an elliptical or a lenticular galaxy. It resides in the Virgo constellation and is best viewed in spring. As I mentioned in my post on Messier 60, the galaxies in Virgo played an essential role in Edwin Hubble’s research inContinueContinue reading “Messier 86 (NGC 4406): A Galaxy Not Running Away”