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However, it's mostly known for it's bright star formation, and being close enough and it's close enough to resolve multiple HII regions and a bright star cluster:
It's also had ten observed supernova, hence "fireworks galaxy".
In the sky, it apears very close to the milky way, which can be seen as the unusally dense star field. Also, there's a lot of dust blocking the galaxy's light which results in it's low surface brightness.
It also makes luminosity measurements unreliable, and because it's too close for acurate redshift data (z=0.00015), it's hard to tell how far away it is: I'd guess somewhere between 10 and 30 million light years.
This time of the year has brutally short nights: it gets dark at midnight and stays dark until four. Technically, only a few minutes of that are astronomical darkness, but I can't be too picky.
To make it worse, it was very windy, so it's not a particularly sharp image... but a clear night is a clear night.
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