Updated
Updated · Otago Daily Times · May 15
Author Photographs 60 Million-Year-Old Markarian's Chain With Backpack Robotic Telescope
Updated
Updated · Otago Daily Times · May 15

Author Photographs 60 Million-Year-Old Markarian's Chain With Backpack Robotic Telescope

2 articles · Updated · Otago Daily Times · May 15
  • A small robotic telescope in Otago captured Markarian’s Chain last week, recording light that left the Virgo Cluster about 60 million years ago.
  • Markarian’s Chain is a curved run of galaxies inside the Virgo Cluster, which contains more than 1,000 galaxies roughly 55 million to 65 million light-years from Earth.
  • M84 and M86 stand near the chain’s center among ellipticals, spirals and interacting galaxies whose slow collisions will eventually merge them.
  • The image underscores how astronomy has shifted from seeing galaxies as isolated systems to placing them in clusters, superclusters and dark-matter-shaped cosmic structure.
  • The author contrasts that accessibility with Benjamin Markarian’s Soviet-era survey work, noting a target once traced with major instruments can now be photographed with backpack-sized gear.
With the Vela Supercluster just mapped, what other cosmic titans are hiding in our galaxy's blind spots?
Could merging galaxies in Markarian's Chain prove a new theory on how to finally 'see' invisible dark matter?