Talk:UGC 2885
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416,000 or 832,000?
[edit]I've just created this article days ago. Before I've created this article I searched this topic on Google. First pages show you that UGC 2885 is more than 800 kilolight-years in diameter. But I searched to 20 pages and now they gave values of 416 kilolight-years.
Now for it to make sense to the two, I've assumed that the figure of 416,000 light-years was the radius, giving you 832,000 light-years, approval to the first one. But still I think this is not the case. Feel free and edit my article if you have a reliable source that gives its size. Thank you! Johndric Valdez (talk) 13:20, 11 September 2013 (UTC)
- I saw a source that says UGC 2885 is over 800,000 ly. in addition, it contains papers. So yes, this source could be reliable. ZaperaWiki44(✉/Contribs) 13:04, 22 May 2018 (UTC)
- @ZaperaWiki44: I read the three papers (well one is a book) presented at the site of the claim of the 250kpc diametre. In the book is written that the "Its rotation period is nearly 2 billion years at a distance of 125,000 parsecs from the nucleus" [1]. It looks like the claim is based on this paper [2], where the distance of 118 Mpc is adopted, which is however not used from more recent papers. It used the now defunct Hubble constant value of 50 km/s/Mpc (now the accepted value is more or less 70) to deliver that distance. The other two papers used adopt the distance of 56.8 Mpc [3][4].
- From NED the distance based on redshift alone is 77.4 Mpc (250 Mly). The distance delivered by the Tully-Fisher method is 71.1 Mpc [5]. At this distance the diametre of UGC 2885 along the major axis is 113.75 kpc (=370 kly) (NED). Because this measurement is based on more recent data, it is also more accurate.
- So the value of 122 Mpc radius is based on a 40 year old paper which used defunct methods to calculated the distance, overestimating the size of UGC 2885. --C messier (talk) 10:51, 16 December 2018 (UTC)
- @C messier: Ok! I will change the radius of UGC 2885. After all, that value/radius of over 122 kpc (over 400 kly) looks highly obsolete. So I can be agree with you. Thank you for telling me. ZaperaWiki44(✉/Contribs) 12:50, 8 March 2019 (UTC)