About this object
This interesting pair of interacting spiral galaxies was first described
in the Catalogue of Peculiar Galaxies, compiled by Halton Arp in 1966.
It is also pair number 64 in Igor Karachentsev's catalog of binary galaxies.
The larger member is strongly tidally distorted, looking almost as
though one side of the galaxy has been placed under a magnifying glass.
The edge-on companion, however, retains a relatively undisturbed
spiral disk, but has a luminous, heavily obscured but infrared-bright,
star-burst nucleus. The nucleus of the large spiral, by way of a contrast,
contains a low-ionization nuclear emission-line region (LINER), which
is indicative of much less activity than the bright nuclear HII region
of its companion.
We thus see an interesting example of the very different responses that
different galaxies can have to interaction with their companions: the
large galaxy has a shredded disk but essentially nothing in its nucleus,
while the small galaxy has an undisturbed disk but a very active nucleus.
Location: 02 19.6 +39 14 (1970.0), constellation of Andromeda.
Distance: approximately 200 million light years.