Kathryns Wheel: A spectacular galaxy collision discovered in the Galactic neighbourhood
Quentin A. Parker, Albert A. Zijlstra, Milorad Stupar, Michelle, Cluver, David J. Frew, George Bendo, Ivan Bojicic

TL;DR
Kathryns Wheel is the nearest collisional ring galaxy, offering unique insights into galaxy collisions at low masses, with detailed observations revealing its structure, star formation, and higher-than-expected space density.
Contribution
This paper reports the discovery and detailed analysis of the closest collisional ring galaxy, expanding understanding of such systems at lower galaxy masses and higher space densities.
Findings
Closest collisional ring galaxy at 10 Mpc distance.
Higher space density of such systems than previously estimated.
Detailed imaging and spectroscopy of the galaxy's structure and star formation.
Abstract
We report the discovery of the closest collisional ring galaxy to the Milky Way. Such rare systems occur due to "bulls-eye" encounters between two reasonably matched galaxies. The recessional velocity of about 840 km/s is low enough that it was detected in the AAO/UKST Survey for Galactic H emission. The distance is only 10.0 Mpc and the main galaxy shows a full ring of star forming knots, 6.1 kpc in diameter surrounding a quiescent disk. The smaller assumed "bullet" galaxy also shows vigorous star formation. The spectacular nature of the object had been overlooked because of its location in the Galactic plane and proximity to a bright star and even though it is the 60 brightest galaxy in the HI Parkes All Sky Survey (HIPASS) HI survey. The overall system has a physical size of 15 kpc, a total mass of M (stars + HI), a…
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