| Goldfish galaxy | |
|---|---|
| SDSS image of the Goldfish galaxy | |
| Observation data (J2000.0 epoch) | |
| Constellation | Draco |
| Right ascension | 17h 13m 03.78s [1] |
| Declination | +64° 07′ 01.71″ [1] |
| Redshift | 0.080923 [1] |
| Heliocentric radial velocity | 24,260 km/s ± 4 [1] |
| Distance | 1,176.3 ± 82.4 Mly (360.67 ± 25.25 Mpc) |
| Group or cluster | Abell 2255 |
| magnitude (J) | 13.48 [1] |
| Characteristics | |
| Type | Radio galaxy [1] |
| Size | ~192,000 ly (58.9 kpc) (estimated) [1] |
| Other designations | |
| 14W 118, 7C 1713+6407a, ABELL 2255:[DMM2003] 2, PGC 59858, SDSS J171303.78+640701.6, 2MASX J17130384+6407014 [1] | |
The Goldfish galaxy, also known as 7C 1713+6407a, is a radio galaxy located in the constellation of Draco. The redshift of the galaxy is z=0.080 [1] and it was first discovered by astronomers in 1974 as an astronomical radio source whom they described it having a steep radio spectrum. [2] It is considered to be a member of the rich galaxy cluster Abell 2255, alongside the Beaver galaxy, the Embryo galaxy, the Original TRG, and the Bean Galaxy. [3] [4] [5]
The Goldfish galaxy is classified as an elliptical galaxy with an active galactic nucleus (AGN). [3] It is a head-tail radio galaxy [4] or alternatively a Fanaroff-Riley class type I narrow-tailed radio galaxy. [6] [7] When observed, it is found to have a weak tail feature. The head feature on the other hand, is shown little polarized by around 4%. [4]
Radio imaging made at 1.4 GHz frequencies has found the head of the Goldfish galaxy as clearly resolved with two radio jets on opposite sides, one of them displaying a bend degree towards the east. A compact radio core is detected at 5 GHz frequencies. When imaged at 15 GHz, the nucleus and only the part of the northern jet is found. [7] The tail feature of the Goldfish galaxy is shown to have an total extension of 261 kiloparsecs and further extended by around 180 kiloparsecs towards the direction of southeast. [8] Earlier observations depicted the nucleus as unresolved. [9]
Further observations at sub-arcsecond resolutions have detected traces of radio emission emitting out from the tail region of the Goldfish galaxy. Evidence also found the tail exhibits a helical morphology with jets appearing to spiral around each other before merging back into a single tail feature. A region of increased surface brightness is detected about 170 kiloparsecs away from the core region. [6]