| NGC 3950 | |
|---|---|
| Observation data (J2000epoch) | |
| Constellation | Ursa Major |
| Right ascension | 11h 53m 41.41s |
| Declination | +47d 53m 04.46s |
| Redshift | 0.074602 |
| Heliocentric radial velocity | 22,365km/s |
| Distance | 1.030Gly (315Mpc) |
| Apparent magnitude (V) | 15.7 |
| Apparent magnitude (B) | 16.7 |
| Surface brightness | 13.2 |
| Characteristics | |
| Type | E, E0;cand. dwarf |
| Apparent size (V) | 0.30' x 0.3' |
| Other designations | |
| PGC 37294,MCG +08-22-030, BTS 051, HOLM 301B | |
NGC 3950 is anelliptical galaxy of type E,[1] inUrsa Major. Itsredshift is 0.074602,[2] meaning NGC 3950 is 1.03 billionlight-years or 316Mpc fromEarth, which is within theHubble distance values.[3] This high redshift makes NGC 3950 one of the furthestNew General Catalogue objects.[4]
NGC 3950 has apparentdimensions of 0.30 x 0.3arcmin, meaning the galaxy is 90,000 light-years across.[5] It was discovered byLawrence Parsons[6][7] on April 27, 1875, and he described it as, "extremely faint, 2.6 arcmin north of h 1009".[6]
In aresearch article published in 1990,[8] NGC 3950 was believed to be adwarf galaxy, and a close companion of a largerspiral galaxy,NGC 3949.[9] But further research involving measuring its redshift in 2005 showed NGC 3950 is much further away in the background.[10] Together with NGC 3949, they both form an optical galaxy pair called HOLM 301.[11]