NGC 4424


NGC 4424 is a spiral galaxy located in the equatorial constellation of Virgo. It was discovered February 27, 1865 by German astronomer Heinrich Louis d'Arrest. This galaxy is located at a distance of 13.5 million light years and is receding with a heliocentric radial velocity of 442 km/s. It has a morphological class of SBa, which normally indicates a spiral galaxy with a barred structure, no inner ring feature, and tightly-wound spiral arms. The galactic plane is inclined at an angle of 62° to the line of sight from the Earth. It is a likely member of the Virgo Cluster of galaxies.
The galaxy NGC 4424 has a peculiar morphology with shells that give the appearance of a galaxy merger within the last half billion years. It has a long tail of hydrogen stretching to the south that is likely due to stripping from ram pressure. Because of the lack of gas, star formation has completely ceased in the outer parts of the galaxy, while there is still a mild amount occurring in the inner region. NGC 4424 will most likely end up as a lenticular galaxy by three billion years from now.
There is no indication of a compact source of X-ray emission in the nucleus, but there is an ionized tail stretching from the core. The velocity dispersion at the core suggests there is a supermassive black hole with a mass of. Hubble images of this galaxy show a tidally-stretched cluster located at a projected distance of from the nucleus. This is probably the core of a captured galaxy. It contains a compact source that is emitting X-rays and may be an active massive black hole. In time this may merge with the core SMBH of NGC 4424.

Supernovae

Two supernovae have been observed in NGC 4424:SN 1895A was discovered by Max Wolf on March 16, 1895.SN 2012cg was discovered by the LOSS program from images taken on May 17, 2012. It reached maximum light nine days later and became the brightest supernova of the year 2012. The supernova reached a peak absolute magnitude of in the B (blue) band and synthesized of the radioactive isotope nickel-56. The available observations favor a merger of double degenerate progenitors as the source for the event. The proximity of the galaxy made this one of the best studied supernova explosions to date.