NGC 4041
NGC 4041 is the New General Catalogue identifier for a spiral galaxy in the northern circumpolar constellation of Ursa Major. It is located an estimated 70 million light years from the Sun. It was discovered by the German-British astronomer William Herschel on 19 March 1790.
The morphological classification of SAbc indicates this is a spiral galaxy the lacks a bar; the 'rs' means it has a weakly-formed ring structure, and the 'bc' indicates the spiral arms are moderately to loosely wound.
The galaxy is inclined by around 20° to the line of sight from the Earth. It is forming new stars at the estimated rate of, which is fairly typical for a galaxy of this morphology. The star formation rate is much higher in the central region, which may be the result of recent merger with a dwarf galaxy within the last 100 million years.
This galaxy has no detected activity in the nuclear region. There is a rotating nuclear disk of high brightness at the core that is consistent with the presence of a compact mass of . Most likely this is a supermassive black hole.
NGC 4041 is a member of the LGG 266 galaxy group,, along with NGC 4036, IC 758, UGC 7009, and UGC 7019. It is located just 17 arc minutes from NGC 4036, and the two form a pair with a projected separation of around. The NGC 4036 Group is part of the Ursa Major Cloud, which is part of the Virgo Supercluster.