Bode's Galaxy and the Cigar Galaxy are a fabulous springtime galactic duo

Images of M81 and M82, the pair of interacting galaxies known as Bode's Galaxy and the Cigar Galaxy, including facts and the history of their discovery.

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Published: April 16, 2024 at 10:19 pm

Bode's Galaxy and the Cigar Galaxy are M81 and M82, respectively, in the Messier Catalogue.

They are a pair of galaxies that can be found in the constellation of Ursa Major, and are some of the most famous galaxies located in that constellation.

Bode's Galaxy

Bode's Galaxy by Bill McSorley, Leeds, UK.
Bode's Galaxy by Bill McSorley, Leeds, UK. Equipment: SW 150P Newtonian on an EQ5 GoTo Mount, QHY8L cooled ccd camera.

Bode's Galaxy is one of the brightest galaxies in the night sky and is located about 11.5 million lightyears from Earth.

Bode's Galaxy can even be seen through a pair of binoculars, appearing as a fuzzy patch along side its companion, the Cigar Galaxy.

It's named after Johann Elert Bode, who discovered the galaxy in 1774, and is a very popular target for those who like to engage in a spot of deep-sky astronomy and astrophotography because young, hot, blue stars can be seen peppered within its spiral arms.

In Bode's Galaxy's central bulge much older, redder stars reside, while at the galaxy's core lies a supermassive black hole about 70 million times the mass of our own Sun.

Cigar Galaxy

Cigar Galaxy by Pat Rodgers, Huddersfield, UK.
Cigar Galaxy by Pat Rodgers, Huddersfield, UK. Equipment: SW200p, Atik 314L , AZ EQ6-GT, SW ST80, ZWO ASI130mm, Baader ccd LRGB filters, Baader 7.5nm Ha filter.

The Cigar Galaxy, or M82, is known as the Cigar because it has an elongated shape, as seen from Earth, and perhaps also because of its high levels of star formation.

It's a 'starbust' galaxy, and this burst of star birth is a result of gravitational interactions with Bode's Galaxy.

According to NASA, stars are being born near the galaxy's centre 10 times as quickly as they are throughout the whole of our home galaxy the Milky Way.

The Cigar Galaxy really is near to Bode's Galaxy: it's not a trick of perspective. They're both about 12 million lightyears from Earth.

Like Bode's Galaxy, the Cigar Galaxy was also discovered by Johann Elert Bode, and is also located in Ursa Major.

Locating Bode's Galaxy and the Cigar Galaxy

Chart showing the location of Bode's Galaxy and the Cigar. Credit: Pete Lawrence
Chart showing the location of Bode's Galaxy and the Cigar Galaxy. Click on chart to expand. Credit: Pete Lawrence

Bode's Galaxy and the Cigar Galaxy are best seen in springtime, and you can find them by first locating the constellation Ursa Major, the Great Bear, and the distinctive Plough pattern located within that constellation.

Identify stars Dubhe and Muscida in Ursa Major. Dubhe is the very last star in the Plough asterism, forming the edge of the 'saucepan' farthest from the handle.

Muscida is the star that forms the bear's nose. Look around the halfway point between Dubhe and Muscida, then scan upwards and you'll see Bode's Galaxy and the Cigar galaxy.

See if you can do a spot of binocular astronomy and catch them both in the same field of view!

Bode's and Cigar Galaxies by Bill McSorley, Leeds, UK.
Bode's and Cigar Galaxies by Bill McSorley, Leeds, UK.

Images

Below is a selection of images of Bode's Galaxy and the Cigar Galaxy captured by BBC Sky at Night Magazine readers and astrophotographers from around the world.

Find out more about astrophotography with our astrophotography guides, or find out which are the best cameras for astrophotography.

And if you'd like to submit your pics, find out how to send us your astrophotos or share them with us via Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

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