NGC 5962

NGC 5962 is a spiral galaxy in the equatorial constellation of Serpens Caput. It was discovered by the Anglo-German astronomer William Herschel on March 21, 1784. The NGC 5962 galaxy is located at a distance of 120 million light years and is receding with a heliocentric radial velocity of $1,957 km/s$. It is the brightest member of the eponymously-named NGC 5962 group, which overlaps with the nearby NGC 5970 group; the two groups may be gravitationally bound.



The morphological (shape) class of NGC 5962 in the infrared is SAB(rs,nrl)c. This notation indicates the galaxy has a bar structure around the nucleus (SAB), an inner pseudo-ring likely associated with the outer Lindblad resonance (rs), a ring-lens structure at the nucleus (nrl), and loosely-wound spiral arms (c). In the optical band, this galaxy is classed as Hubble type SA(r)c, displaying an inner ring with no visible bar. The galactic plane is inclined at an angle of $0$ to the line of sight from the Earth, giving it an oval profile with the major axis aligned along a position angle of $1.49 arcminute$.

Along with a populated nucleus, it has a relatively large core, but a small central bulge, in which the spiral arms begin to unfurl. There is some evidence for a low level of nuclear activity, and it has been classed as a nuclear H II region galaxy. Based on its emission of far ultraviolet radiation, the pseudo-ring structure is actively undergoing star formation. The galaxy is forming stars at the rate of $1.073 arcminute$·yr−1. There are two confirmed satellite galaxies; a third candidate proved to be too distant based on its redshift value.

Two supernovae have been detected in this galaxy: SN 2016afa (type II, mag. 17.1) was discovered February 12, 2016, and SN 2017ivu (type IIP, mag. 15.4) was spotted December 11, 2017.