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Messier 86
Messier 86
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Messier 86
Galaxy Messier 86 in Virgo, imaged by the Hubble Space Telescope
Observation data (J2000 epoch)
ConstellationVirgo
Right ascension12h 26m 11.7s[1]
Declination+12° 56′ 46″[1]
Redshift−0.000814 ± 0.000017 (−244 ± 5 km/s)[1]
Distance52 ± 3 Mly (15.9 ± 1.0 Mpc)[2]
Apparent magnitude (V)8.9[3]
Characteristics
TypeS0(3)/E3[1]
Apparent size (V)8.9 × 5.8[1]
Notable featuresdisplays a rare blue shift
Other designations
NGC 4406,[1] UGC 7532,[1] PGC 40653,[1] VCC 0881[1]

Messier 86 (also known as M86 or NGC 4406) is a bright elliptical or lenticular galaxy in the constellation of Virgo. It was discovered by Charles Messier in 1781. M86 lies in the heart of the Virgo Cluster of galaxies and forms a most conspicuous group with another large galaxy known as Messier 84. It displays the highest blue shift of all Messier objects, as it is, net of its other vectors of travel, approaching the Milky Way at 244 km/s. This is due to both galaxies falling roughly towards the center of the Virgo cluster from opposing ends.[4]

Messier 86 has a rich array of globular clusters, with a total number of around 3,800.[5] Its halo also has a number of stellar streams interpreted as remnants of dwarf galaxies that have been disrupted and absorbed by this galaxy.[6]

Messier 86 is linked by several filaments of ionized gas to the severely disrupted spiral galaxy NGC 4438, indicating that M86 may have stripped some gas and interstellar dust from the spiral.[7] It is also suffering ram-pressure stripping as it moves at high speed through Virgo's intracluster medium, losing its interstellar medium and leaving behind a very long trail of X ray-emitting hot gas that has been detected with the help of the Chandra space telescope.[8] The metal composition of magnesium, silicon and sulfur in the M86 galaxy is more similar to the rest of the universe than its own stellar population. This suggests that even ram pressure stripping is insufficient to strip the inner parts of the galaxy.[9]


See also

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References

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from Grokipedia
Messier 86 (M86) is a giant elliptical or located in the constellation Virgo, approximately 52 million light-years from Earth as part of the . Discovered by French astronomer in 1781, it appears as a bright object with an of 9.2, making it visible through or small telescopes during late spring. With a diameter spanning about 135,000 light-years, M86 hosts roughly 3,800 globular star clusters and an estimated hundreds of billions of stars, primarily older, low-mass populations characteristic of early-type galaxies. As one of the brightest members of the —second only to —M86 is situated on the cluster's far side and is hurtling toward its center at over 543,000 miles per hour, the fastest velocity among galaxies in Messier's catalog. This rapid motion through the cluster's hot causes ram-pressure stripping, which has sculpted a prominent tail of hot, X-ray-emitting gas extending from the galaxy. Observations from the have revealed intricate details of M86's core structure in visible and near-infrared light, aiding studies of in dense cluster environments. M86 also shows evidence of dynamical interactions within the cluster, notably with the nearby NGC 4438 (part of the "" pair), connected by filaments of ionized gas indicative of recent tidal encounters. These interactions highlight M86's role in the ongoing mergers and disruptions shaping the , providing insights into the assembly of massive elliptical galaxies.

Physical characteristics

Morphology and classification

Messier 86 is classified as a lenticular galaxy of type S0(3) or an elliptical galaxy of type E3 within the Hubble morphological classification scheme. The Hubble sequence, introduced by Edwin Hubble in 1926, arranges galaxies along a progression from early-type to late-type forms, where elliptical galaxies (denoted E followed by a numerical index from 0 to 7 indicating increasing ellipticity) exhibit smooth, spheroidal distributions of old stars without disks or arms, and lenticular galaxies (S0) represent an intermediate stage with a prominent bulge and a faint, featureless disk but no spiral structure. This dual classification for Messier 86 arises from ongoing debate among astronomers, as its overall smooth stellar envelope aligns with elliptical traits, while subtle evidence of a faint underlying disk supports a lenticular interpretation. The galaxy's integrated apparent visual magnitude is 9.2, making it one of the brighter members visible to amateur telescopes under . Its follows the de Vaucouleurs r^{1/4} law typical of elliptical and lenticular galaxies, characterized by a centrally concentrated profile that declines gradually outward, reflecting a dominance of older stellar populations. Messier 86 spans an angular size of 9.3′ × 6.6′ on the sky, with its major axis oriented at approximately 129°. At its distance, this corresponds to a physical of about 135,000 light-years, underscoring its status as a giant . Optical imaging reveals a distinctive bright core dominated by the galaxy's central bulge, enveloped by a diffuse, extended halo that fades into the surrounding of the . This structure lacks prominent dust lanes, young star-forming regions, or tidal distortions in visible light, consistent with its early-type morphology.

Distance, size, and velocity

Messier 86 lies at a distance of 55 million light-years (17 Mpc) from , as estimated through fluctuations (SBF) in its resolved , with the method calibrated against stars in nearby galaxies. This distance places it firmly within the , though its precise position reflects the cluster's three-dimensional structure. The galaxy's apparent angular size is 9.3 × 6.6 arcminutes, corresponding to a physical of approximately 135,000 light-years across its major axis. To derive the linear dimensions from the observed angular size θ (in radians), the physical size D is given by D = θ × d, where d is the to the galaxy; for small angles, θ ≈ (angular size in arcminutes) × (π / (180 × 60)) radians. Using the m - M = 5 \log_{10}(d) - 5 (with d in parsecs) to confirm the scale, the modulus for M86 is approximately 31.2 mag, yielding consistent linear extents when applied to its isophotal contours. M86 exhibits a heliocentric radial velocity of -244 km/s, indicating a blueshift due to its motion toward the —the highest such blueshift among all objects in the Messier catalog. This approach speed equates to roughly 880,000 km/h relative to our galaxy. The blueshift arises from the , described by the formula \frac{\Delta \lambda}{\lambda} = \frac{v}{c}, where \Delta \lambda is the wavelength shift, \lambda is the rest wavelength, v is the (negative for approaching sources), and c is the ; for M86, this results in emission and absorption lines shifted to shorter (bluer) wavelengths in observed spectra. The galaxy's apparent visual magnitude is 9.2, leading to an absolute visual magnitude of approximately -21.8 when corrected for using the modulus formula above. This intrinsic brightness implies a total of about 45 billion times that of the Sun, underscoring M86's status as a luminous early-type capable of hosting thousands of globular clusters.

Discovery and observation

Historical discovery

Messier 86 was discovered by the French astronomer on March 18, 1781, during his systematic search for comets, and it became the 86th entry in his renowned Catalogue des Nébuleuses et des Amas d'Étoiles, a compilation aimed at identifying fixed, comet-like deep-sky objects to avoid confusion with transient comets. This catalog, first published in 1774 and expanded over subsequent years, marked M86 as one of eight new nebulous objects Messier identified that night in the constellation Virgo, highlighting the dense concentration of such features in that region. In his contemporaneous notes, Messier described M86 as a "nebula without star, in Virgo, on the parallel and very near 5 Virginis, and to the nebula No. 84," emphasizing its faint, starless appearance and precise location relative to the star 5 Virginis (also known as 5 Vir) and the adjacent , which he had cataloged earlier the same evening. This observation was made using Messier's 3.5-foot at the Hôtel de Cluny in , under conditions that allowed detection of its diffuse glow despite its subdued brightness, underscoring the limitations and ingenuity of 18th-century visual astronomy. The object's non-stellar nature was further affirmed in the early by British astronomer , who observed it on April 8, 1784, with his superior 20-foot and classified it definitively as a , noting its irregular, elongated form and bright core without resolving individual stars. Herschel's sweeps of the Virgo region contributed to the growing recognition of nebulae as distinct celestial phenomena, building on Messier's foundational work by providing more detailed morphological insights. By the late , M86 received a formal designation in the New General Catalogue of Nebulae and Clusters of Stars (NGC), compiled by Danish-Irish astronomer John Louis Emil Dreyer and published in 1888, where it was listed as NGC 4406 based on consolidated observations from earlier catalogs, including those of Messier and Herschel. This inclusion standardized its reference in astronomical literature, facilitating subsequent studies of the where M86 resides.

Observational history

Following its initial cataloging, Messier 86 was observed by on April 17, 1784, who described it as a bright, compact among two resolvable objects in Virgo. His son further detailed it in the early , noting its very bright, large, round appearance with gradual brightening toward a central nucleus and a mottled texture, based on sweeps with his 20-foot reflector. In the 1840s, William Parsons, 3rd Earl of Rosse, used his pioneering 72-inch reflector at to examine nebulae in the Virgo region, including M86, resolving finer details such as its extended envelope compared to smaller instruments, though its elliptical form limited spiral-like revelations seen in other objects. Advancements in the transformed understanding of M86's nature. In the 1920s, Edwin Hubble's observations helped confirm the extragalactic nature of many "nebulae," including those in the . By the 1950s, photoelectric photometry techniques enabled precise measurements of its apparent visual magnitude around 8.9, providing standardized brightness data essential for comparative studies of cluster members. For amateur astronomers, Messier 86 remains accessible under dark skies with a 4-inch (100 mm) , appearing as a fuzzy oval near the magnitude 9.2 companion , best viewed during spring evenings when Virgo culminates high in the southern sky. Locating it involves star-hopping from the bright in Virgo to the asterism, where enhances its subtle elongation. Early observations with the in the 1990s, using the Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2 installed in 1993, unveiled intricate lanes and ionized gas filaments extending from M86, highlighting its interaction with the . More recently, in 2024, the (JWST) observed M86 as part of the TRGB-SBF Project on the , providing high-resolution near-infrared images that resolve stellar populations and support refined distance calibrations.

Internal structure

Stellar population and composition

Messier 86 hosts a predominantly old , with ages estimated at approximately 11 billion years based on spectroscopic indices such as Hβ and , which indicate a mature, evolved system dominated by stars of spectral type . The of this population is near-solar, with [M/H] ranging from 0.0 to +0.31, reflecting enrichment processes typical of massive elliptical galaxies in cluster environments. This composition contributes to the galaxy's red optical colors and smooth light profile, with K giants providing the bulk of the integrated light due to their prominence in post-main-sequence evolution. Evidence for dust lanes and an is evident in the galaxy's central regions and halo, where optical absorption features—such as prominent dusty filaments labeled A and B—reveal cold masses of ~10^6 M_⊙ aligned with atomic and ionized gas distributions. These structures, detected via Herschel submillimeter imaging at 250–500 μm, coincide with a north-south dust lane and suggest recent minor mergers, particularly tidal stripping of ~10^9 M_⊙ of material from the interacting spiral NGC 4438, which has heated and redistributed the within M86's hot halo. Stellar streams in the halo of Messier 86, interpreted as remnants of accreted dwarf galaxies, are detectable through substructures like the southeast "shelf," a low-surface-brightness feature extending from the main body. This shelf, along with offset density peaks and bridges in the surrounding system, points to past accretion events, with the streams traced via deep wide-field imaging that resolves faint stellar overdensities against the background. The of Messier 86 is estimated at around 4 × 10^{11} M_⊙, inferred from its and typical mass-to-light ratios for old elliptical populations, while the total dynamical mass within the effective radius reaches ~10^{12} M_⊙, derived from velocity dispersion measurements of planetary nebulae and application of the (M ≈ v^2 r / G, with σ ≈ 210 km s^{-1} in the inner halo).

system

Messier 86 hosts an extensive system of approximately 3,800 , one of the largest known among elliptical galaxies, far exceeding the roughly 150 globular clusters in the . This rich population underscores the galaxy's massive halo and its role in the environment. The globular clusters are primarily concentrated in the , extending outward to about 80 kpc from the center, with substructures such as an offset peak and a bridge connecting to the neighboring M84. Their color distribution exhibits a clear bimodality, reflecting distinct metal-poor () and metal-rich () subpopulations, where the blue clusters predominate in the identified substructures and trace older, accreted material. The specific frequency of these clusters, defined as the number per unit galaxy V-band luminosity normalized such that S_N = 1 corresponds to one globular cluster per 10^5 solar luminosities in V (S_N = N_GC × 10^{0.5(M_V + 5)}), is approximately 5–6, which is notably higher than the average of 2–3 for typical elliptical galaxies. Dynamical analyses of the globular clusters serve as kinematic tracers of Messier 86's , revealing a velocity dispersion of 308^{+60}_{-49} km s^{-1} across the system, which helps map the underlying and constrain halo properties.

Galactic environment

Virgo Cluster membership

Messier 86 is a prominent member of the Virgo Cluster, the nearest major galaxy cluster to the Milky Way, located at an average distance of approximately 16 Mpc (52 million light-years). This cluster contains an estimated 1,300 to 2,000 galaxies, ranging from giant ellipticals to dwarf irregulars, and is dominated by the massive elliptical galaxy Messier 87 at its core, which anchors the primary subcluster with a mass on the order of 10^{14} solar masses. Positioned in the central region of the , Messier 86 resides in a secondary subcluster northwest of , with equatorial coordinates of 12h 26m 11.7s and +12° 56′ 46″. This subcluster, centered on Messier 86, has a mass roughly an smaller than the Messier 87 subcluster and includes a swarm of associated dwarf elliptical galaxies. Messier 86 forms part of the prominent , a linear arrangement of galaxies stretching across the cluster's core that highlights the dense distribution of members in this area. Dynamically, Messier 86 is infalling toward the center, exhibiting a heliocentric of approximately -227 km/s, which translates to a of about 1,500 km/s toward compared to the cluster's mean of around +1,100 km/s. This high peculiar indicates that Messier 86 and its subcluster are on a trajectory that will likely lead to a merger with the dominant subcluster over cosmic timescales, contributing to the ongoing assembly of the cluster. The Virgo Cluster's environment profoundly influences Messier 86 through its hot (ICM), a tenuous plasma filling the intergalactic with temperatures around 10^7 K (corresponding to 1-3 keV) and particle densities on the order of 10^{-3} cm^{-3} in the core regions. This ICM, detected primarily through emission, exerts and thermal effects on infalling galaxies like Messier 86, shaping their gas content and evolution as they traverse the cluster.

Interactions with neighboring galaxies

Messier 86 (M86) exhibits significant gravitational and hydrodynamic interactions with the nearby NGC 4438 (part of the "" pair with NGC 4435), located approximately 120 kpc in projection. Observations reveal a collision between the two galaxies that occurred roughly 100-200 million years ago, as inferred from the dynamical timescales and structures in the connecting filaments. This interaction is evidenced by a prominent gas tail extending about 35 kpc and an Hα bridge linking the galaxies, with a line-of-sight difference of approximately 300 km/s. During this encounter, played a key role in removing (ISM) from both galaxies. The mechanism, described by the Gunn-Gott formula where the Pram=ρICMv2P_{\rm ram} = \rho_{\rm ICM} v^2 exceeds the binding pressure of the gas PgasP_{\rm gas}, leading to stripping when Pram>PgasP_{\rm ram} > P_{\rm gas}, resulted in significant gas loss. For M86, this process, influenced by its motion through the Virgo Cluster's (ICM) with density ρICM103\rho_{\rm ICM} \approx 10^{-3} cm3^{-3} and high velocity, has produced a truncated gas disk. Tidal effects from the collision have likely distorted the outer halo of M86, with simulations indicating potential merger remnants in the form of extended tidal features and disrupted stellar distributions. These interactions have accelerated the suppression of star formation in M86 by heating the ISM and depleting the cold gas reservoir necessary for new stars.

Scientific studies

Multi-wavelength observations

Observations of Messier 86 (M86) in optical and ultraviolet wavelengths, primarily from the Hubble Space Telescope (HST), reveal prominent dust lanes and shell-like structures within its halo. HST imaging in visible and near-infrared bands highlights intricate dust streamers extending up to approximately 28 kpc, interpreted as material disrupted by interactions within the Virgo Cluster. These features appear as filamentary absorption against the galaxy's stellar light, with the dust concentrated in a trail pointing toward the cluster center. In the ultraviolet, GALEX and HST data detect an excess of far-UV emission from the central regions, attributed to hot, young stars in post-asymptotic giant branch populations or recent low-level star formation. X-ray observations with the have uncovered a dramatic tail of stripped hot gas extending northwest from M86, spanning about 100 kpc in projection. This feature, detected in the 0.5-2 keV band, exhibits a of roughly 104010^{40} erg/s and consists of a bright plume near the galaxy core transitioning into elongated extensions, consistent with stripping by the . The central X-ray source in M86 arises from hot coronal gas associated with the and surrounding , with temperatures around 0.6 keV. Deeper Chandra exposures confirm the tail's extent to several hundred kpc, showing cooling gas condensations. Radio observations using the (VLA) map the distribution of neutral hydrogen (HI) and (CO) near M86, revealing stripped atomic and molecular gas tails aligned with the X-ray features. VLA HI maps detect a total HI mass of about 108M10^8 M_\odot, concentrated in an asymmetric envelope trailing the galaxy's motion through the cluster, indicative of ongoing stripping. CO(1-0) and CO(2-1) line observations identify molecular gas reservoirs in the near M86, with detections along a 120 kpc tail connecting to NGC 4438, suggesting survival of cold gas clouds despite the hot environment. Additionally, VLA continuum maps at 1-2 GHz show extended emission from relativistic electrons, tracing low-luminosity radio lobes and diffuse structures linked to the galaxy's active nucleus and stripped material. Infrared observations with the provide insights into the content in M86. Far-infrared data at 250-500 μm map cooler associated with the stripped tails.

Recent and significance

Recent studies of Messier 86 (M86) have leveraged advanced spectroscopic observations to probe the chemical composition of its hot gaseous halo and circumgalactic medium (CGM), revealing insights into the galaxy's interaction with the environment. In a 2025 analysis using an 85.6 ks observation, Kara et al. examined the abundance ratios of magnesium (Mg), (Si), and (S) relative to iron (Fe) across the galaxy's core, plume, and CGM. They found a non-uniform metal distribution in the CGM, with metals more centrally concentrated than the hot gas, indicating that the observed enrichment primarily stems from Type Ia supernovae within the galaxy itself, followed by ram-pressure stripping that disperses these metals outward. The Mg/Fe ratio in the plume was notably elevated (3.3σ higher than in the core), suggesting an influx of low-entropy gas from the M86 group outskirts, possibly triggered by a galaxy-galaxy collision, which mixes with the Virgo (ICM). Modeling of M86's dark matter halo has drawn on kinematics of its extensive globular cluster (GC) system, which numbers approximately 3,800 and traces the gravitational potential out to large radii. Spectroscopic observations of ~300 GCs reveal a velocity dispersion profile consistent with a massive dark halo, constraining the total mass to approximately 10^{13} solar masses within 200 kpc, dominated by dark matter beyond the stellar component. This modeling highlights the halo's role in retaining gas against cluster tides, while ram-pressure effects truncate the outer envelope. M86 serves as a prototypical example of ram-pressure stripping in dense cluster environments, where its high relative velocity (~1,500 km/s through the ICM) strips interstellar and circumgalactic gas, contributing to of . This process informs broader models of galaxy evolution in clusters, demonstrating how environmental interactions suppress ongoing enrichment and alter the baryon cycle, with implications for the observed color-magnitude relations in Virgo members. The non-uniform CGM metals underscore stripping's inefficiency in fully depleting the inner hot atmosphere, preserving a influenced by feedback. Looking ahead, the (JWST) offers significant potential for resolved stellar archaeology in M86, as demonstrated by recent NIRCam imaging that resolves substructure in its halo and enables precise tip-of-the-red-giant-branch (TRGB) measurements for distance calibration. These observations, part of the TRGB-SBF project, cover the cores and halos of Virgo galaxies including M86, paving the way for detailed studies of ancient stellar populations and merger remnants. Additionally, if M86's central (estimated at ~10^9 solar masses via the M-σ relation) exhibits heightened activity, the Event Horizon Telescope could potentially image its , providing constraints on accretion dynamics in a cluster environment.

References

  1. https://science.[nasa](/page/NASA).gov/mission/hubble/science/explore-the-night-sky/hubble-messier-catalog/messier-86/
  2. http://.u-strasbg.fr/simbad/sim-basic?Ident=Messier+86
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