Atlas of Peculiar Galaxies


The Atlas of Peculiar Galaxies is a catalog of peculiar galaxies produced by Halton Arp in 1966. A total of 338 galaxies are presented in the atlas, which was originally published in 1966 by the California Institute of Technology. The primary goal of the catalog was to present photographs of examples of the different kinds of peculiar structures found among galaxies.

Background

Arp realized that the reason why galaxies formed into spiral or elliptical shapes was not well understood. He perceived peculiar galaxies as small "experiments" that astronomers could use to understand the physical processes that distort spiral or elliptical galaxies. With this atlas, astronomers had a sample of peculiar galaxies that they could study in more detail. The atlas does not present a complete overview of every peculiar galaxy in the sky but instead provides examples of the different phenomena as observed in nearby galaxies.
Because little was known at the time of publication about the physical processes that caused the different shapes, the galaxies in the atlas are sorted based on their appearance. Objects 1–101 are individual peculiar spiral galaxies or spiral galaxies that apparently have small companions. Objects 102–145 are elliptical and elliptical-like galaxies. Individual or groups of galaxies with neither elliptical nor spiral shapes are listed as objects 146–268. Objects 269–327 are double galaxies. Finally, objects that simply do not fit into any of the above categories are listed as objects 332–338. Most objects are best known by their other designations, but a few galaxies are best known by their Arp numbers.
Today, the physical processes that lead to the peculiarities seen in the Arp atlas are thought to be well understood. A large number of the objects have been interpreted as interacting galaxies, including M51, Arp 220, and the Antennae Galaxies. A few of the galaxies are simply dwarf galaxies that do not have enough mass to produce enough gravity to allow the galaxies to form any cohesive structure. NGC 1569 is an example of one of the dwarf galaxies in the atlas. A few other galaxies are radio galaxies. These objects contain active galactic nuclei that produce powerful jets of gas called radio jets. The atlas includes the nearby radio galaxies M87 and Centaurus A.
Many of the peculiar associations present in the catalogue have been interpreted as galaxy mergers, though Arp refuted the idea, claiming, rather, that apparent associations were prime examples of ejections. He writes in "Seeing Red" :
For me, the whole lesson of the Atlas of Peculiar Galaxies was that galaxies are generally ejected material. The merger mania seems to be a first guess based on a cursory look at galaxies. The Atlas of Peculiar Galaxies contained a very interesting class of galaxies called spirals with companions on the ends of arms. How had they gotten there? Certainly not by accidental collisions or by the beginning of a merger process, which is fashionably used to "explain" everything in the extragalactic realm.

Notable Arp galaxies

Arp NumberNameMagnitudeNotes
26Pinwheel Galaxy +7.5spiral galaxy
37Messier 77+8.9radio galaxy
41NGC 1232+9.8spiral galaxy
76Messier 90+9.5spiral galaxy
77NGC 1097+9.5galaxy interacting with its satellite
85Whirlpool Galaxy +8.4galaxy interacting with its satellite
116Messier 60+8.8colliding galaxies
152Virgo A +8.6elliptical galaxy
153Centaurus A +6.6radio galaxy in a collision?
188Tadpole Galaxy+14.4galaxy finishing merging
242Mice Galaxies+14.7colliding galaxies
244Antennae Galaxies+10.3colliding galaxies
317Messier 65+9.2spiral galaxy
319NGC 7320+15galaxy in colliding group
337Cigar Galaxy +8.6starburst galaxy

List of galaxies in the catalog

Spiral galaxies

Low surface brightness galaxies

These are mostly dwarf galaxies or poorly defined spiral galaxies that have low surface brightnesses. Low surface brightness galaxies are actually quite common. The exception is NGC 2857, which is an Sc spiral galaxy.
Arp NumberCommon NameNotes
1NGC 2857Sc spiral galaxy
2UGC 10310
3Arp 3
4Arp 4
5NGC 3664
6NGC 2537

Galaxies with split arms

This category contains spiral galaxies with arms that split into two separate parts.
Arp NumberCommon NameNotes
7Arp 7
8NGC 497
9NGC 2523
10UGC 1775Contains an off-center nucleus
11UGC 717
12NGC 2608

Galaxies with detached segments

This category contains spiral galaxies with arms that appear to be segmented. Some spiral arm segments may appear detached because dust lanes in the spiral arms obscure the arms' starlight. Other spiral arms may appear segmented because of the presence of bright star clusters in the spiral arms.
Arp NumberCommon NameNotes
13NGC 7448
14NGC 7314
15NGC 7393
16M66
17UGC 3972
18NGC 4088

Three-armed spiral galaxies

Usually, most spiral galaxies contain two clearly defined spiral arms, or they contain only fuzzy filamentary spiral structures. Galaxies with three well-defined spiral arms are rare.
Arp NumberCommon NameNotes
19NGC 145
20UGC 3014
21Arp 21

One-armed spiral galaxies

One-armed spiral galaxies, including Magellanic spirals, are also rare. In this case, the single spiral arm may actually be formed by a gravitational interaction with another galaxy.
Arp NumberCommon NameNotes
22NGC 4027
23NGC 4618Interacting with NGC 4625
24NGC 3445

Spiral galaxies with one heavy arm

The spiral arms in these galaxies have an asymmetric appearance. One spiral arm may appear to be considerably brighter than the other. In the photographic plates produced by Arp, the bright arm would look dark or "heavy". While most of these galaxies are simply asymmetric spiral galaxies, NGC 6365 is an interacting pair of galaxies where one of the two galaxies is viewed edge-on and just happens to lie where the spiral arm for the other face-on galaxy would be visible.
Arp NumberCommon NameNotes
25NGC 2276
26M101Face-on spiral galaxy with five notable companion galaxies
27NGC 3631
28NGC 7678
29NGC 6946
30NGC 6365Interacting pair of galaxies, with one galaxy viewed edge-on

Integral sign spiral galaxies

These are galaxies that look like a stretched-out S shape. Some objects, such as IC 167, are simply ordinary spiral galaxies viewed from an unusual angle. Other objects, such as UGC 10770, are interacting pairs of galaxies with tidal tails that look similar to spiral arms.
Arp NumberCommon NameNotes
31IC 167
32UGC 10770
33UGC 8613
34NGC 4615
35UGC 212
36UGC 8548

Spiral galaxies with low surface brightness companions

Many of these spiral galaxies are probably interacting with the low surface brightness galaxies in the field of view. In some cases, however, it may be difficult to determine whether the companion is physically near the spiral galaxy or whether the companion is a foreground/background source or a source on the edge of the spiral galaxy.
Arp NumberCommon NameNotes
37M77
38NGC 6412
39NGC 1347
40IC 4271
41NGC 1232
42NGC 5829
43IC 607
44IC 609
45UGC 9178Galaxy triplet
46UGC 12665
47Arp 47
48Arp 48

Spiral galaxies with small high surface brightness companions

Again, many of these spiral galaxies are probably interacting with companion galaxies, although some of the identified companion galaxies may be foreground/background sources or even bright star clusters within the individual galaxies.
Arp NumberCommon NameNotes
49NGC 5665
50IC 1520
51Arp 51
52Arp 52
53NGC 3290
54Arp 54
55UGC 4881
56UGC 1432
57Arp 57
58UGC 4457
59NGC 341
60Arp 60
61UGC 3104
62UGC 6865
63NGC 2944
64UGC 9503
65NGC 90
66UGC 10396
67UGC 892
68NGC 7757
69NGC 5579
70UGC 934
71NGC 6045
72NGC 5994, NGC 5996
73IC 1222
74UGC 1626
75NGC 702
76M90
77NGC 1097
78NGC 772

Spiral galaxies with large high surface brightness companions

Galaxies in this category are almost always clearly interacting sources. The most famous of these objects is the Whirlpool galaxy, which is composed of a spiral galaxy NGC 5194 that is interacting with a smaller elliptical galaxy NGC 5195. The interaction has distorted the shape of both galaxies; the spiral arm pattern has been enhanced in the larger spiral galaxy, and a bridge of stars and gas has formed between the two galaxies. Many of the other galaxies in this category are also connected by bridges.
Arp NumberCommon NameNotes
79NGC 5490C
80NGC 2633
81NGC 6621, UGC 11175, NGC 6622
82NGC 2535, NGC 2536
83NGC 2799, NGC 3800
84NGC 5394, NGC 5395
85The Whirlpool Galaxy
86NGC 7752, NGC 7753
87NGC 3808A, NGC 3808B
88Arp 88
89NGC 2648
90NGC 5929, NGC 5930
91NGC 5953, NGC 5954

Spiral galaxies with elliptical companions

Like the spiral galaxies with high surface brightness companions, most of these spiral galaxies are clearly interacting systems. Tidal tails and bridges are visible in many of the images.
Arp NumberCommon NameNotes
92NGC 7603
93NGC 7284, NGC 7285
94NGC 3226, NGC 3227
95IC 4461, IC 4462
96UGC 3528
97UGC 7085A
98UGC 1095
99NGC 7547, NGC 7549, NGC 7550Galaxy triplet
100IC 18, IC 19
101UGC 10164, UGC 10169

Elliptical and elliptical-like galaxies

Elliptical galaxies connected to spiral galaxies

These objects are very similar to the spiral galaxies with elliptical companions. All of the galaxies have features such as tidal tails and tidal bridges that have formed through gravitational interaction.
Arp NumberCommon NameNotes
102Arp 102
103UGC 10586Galaxy triplet
104NGC 5216, NGC 5218
105NGC 3561
106NGC 4211
107UGC 5984
108Arp 108

Elliptical galaxies repelling spiral arms

Based on the description of these objects, it appears that Arp originally thought that the elliptical galaxies were pushing away spiral arms in companion galaxies. However, the tidal spiral arms may actually look distorted because of the interaction. Some of these "repelled" spiral arms are on the opposite side of the spiral galaxy from the elliptical galaxy. Simulations have shown that such features can be formed through gravitational interactions alone; no repelling forces are needed.
Arp NumberCommon NameNotes
109UGC 10053
110Arp 110
111NGC 5421Galaxy group
112NGC 7805, NGC 7806

Elliptical galaxies close to and perturbing spiral galaxies

This is another category in which the majority of objects are interacting galaxies. As noted in the category name, the spiral galaxies look perturbed. Arp originally described some of the elliptical galaxies as repelling.
Arp NumberCommon NameNotes
113NGC 70Part of a group of galaxies
114NGC 2276, NGC 2300
115UGC 6678Galaxy triplet
116Messier 60, NGC 4647
117IC 982, IC 983
118NGC 1141, NGC 1142
119Arp 119
120NGC 4435, NGC 4438
121Arp 121
122NGC 6040
123NGC 1888, NGC 1889
124NGC 6361
125UGC 10491
126UGC 1449
127NGC 191Actually interacting S0 galaxy and spiral galaxy
128UGC 827
129UGC 5146
130IC 5378
131Arp 131
132Arp 132

Galaxies with Nearby Fragments

Arp NumberCommon NameNotes
133NGC 541
134Messier 49
135NGC 1023
136NGC 5820

Material emanating from elliptical galaxies

Arp thought that the elliptical galaxies in this category were ejecting material from their nuclei. Many of the pictures could be interpreted that way. However, these objects are actually a mixture of other phenomena. For example, NGC 2914 is merely a spiral galaxy with faint spiral arms, and NGC 4015 is an interacting pair of galaxies where one galaxy is an edge-on spiral galaxy. Some objects, such as NGC 2444 and NGC 2445, are systems that contain "ring galaxies", which are created when one galaxy passes through the disk of another. This passage causes a gravitational wave in which gas first falls inward and then propagates outward to form the ring structure.
, once a standard spiral galaxy, and NGC 2937, a smaller elliptical.
Arp NumberCommon NameNotes
137NGC 2914Spiral galaxy with faint spiral arms
138NGC 4015Interacting pair of galaxies
139Arp 139Interacting pair of galaxies
140NGC 274, NGC 275Interacting pair of galaxies
141UGC 3730Ring galaxy system
142NGC 2936, NGC 2937, UGC 5130Galaxy triplet
143NGC 2444, NGC 2445Ring galaxy system
144NGC 7828, NGC 7829Ring galaxy system
145UGC 1840Ring galaxy system

Amorphous galaxies

Galaxies in this category are referred to by Arp as galaxies that are neither spiral nor elliptical in shape. Although he does not use the term "amorphous" to describe these galaxies, it is the best description of these galaxies.
Many of these galaxies are either interacting galaxies or galaxies that are the remnants of the merger of two smaller galaxies. The interaction process will produce various tidal features, such as tidal tails and tidal bridges, that may last well after the progenitor galaxies' disks and nuclei have merged. Although the tidal tails are described as several different visual phenomena, they are all manifestations of the same phenomena.

Galaxies with associated rings

As noted above, these ring galaxies may have formed when a companion galaxy passed through
the ring galaxy. The interaction would produce a wave effect that would first draw matter into the center and then cause it to propagate outward in a ring.
Arp NumberCommon NameNotes
146Arp 146
147IC 298
148Arp 148

Galaxies with jets

These are galaxies that appear to be ejecting material outwards from their nuclei. The "jets" themselves look similar to water spraying out of a hose. In the case of IC 803 and NGC 7609, the jets are simply part of the amorphous structure produced by the interacting galaxies. In Arp 151 and Messier 87, however, the jets are ionized gas that has been ejected from the environment around supermassive black holes in the galaxies' active galactic nuclei. These jets, sometimes called relativistic jets or radio jets, are powerful sources of synchrotron radiation, especially at radio wavelengths.
Arp NumberCommon NameNotes
149IC 803Interacting galaxies
150NGC 7609Interacting galaxies
151Arp 151Seyfert galaxy
152Messier 87Seyfert galaxy

Disturbed galaxies with interior absorption

Galaxies in this category feature dark dust lanes that obscure part of the disk of the galaxy. All of these galaxies are the products of two galaxies merging. NGC 520 is one of the best examples of an intermediate-stage merger, where the two progenitor galaxies' disks have coalesced together but the nuclei have not. Centaurus A and NGC 1316 are both effectively elliptical galaxies with unusual dust lanes; their kinematics and structure indicate that they have undergone merging events recently. NGC 4747 may be nothing more than an edge-on spiral galaxy with a significantly dark dust lanes.
Arp NumberCommon NameNotes
153Centaurus ANotable radio galaxy; contains an active galactic nucleus)
154NGC 1316Notable radio galaxy; contains an active galactic nucleus)
155NGC 3656
156UGC 5184
157NGC 520Notable intermediate-stage merger
158NGC 523
159NGC 4747Spiral galaxy with dark dust lanes
160NGC 4194Also known as the Medusa Galaxy

Galaxies with diffuse filaments

The filaments in these objects may represent tidal tails from galaxy interactions. Many of the galaxies are the remnants of the mergers of two spiral galaxies to form a single elliptical galaxy. However, NGC 3414 appears to be merely an unusual S0 galaxy with a very small disk relative to its bulge size. NGC 4670 is a blue compact dwarf galaxy with extremely strong star formation activity; it is clearly too small to be the merger remnant of two spiral galaxies like the other merger remnants in this sample, although it may have been involved in a much smaller interaction.
Arp NumberCommon NameNotes
161UGC 6665
162NGC 3414S0 galaxy
163NGC 4670Blue compact dwarf galaxy
164NGC 455
165NGC 2418
166NGC 750, NGC 751Interacting galaxies

Galaxies with diffuse counter-tails

All of these objects are galaxies involved in gravitational interactions. These counter-tails are tidal features caused by the gravitational interactions between two galaxies, just like similar features described in the Arp catalog. Messier 32, a dwarf galaxy interacting with the Andromeda Galaxy, is included in this category.
Arp NumberCommon NameNotes
167NGC 2672, NGC 2673
168Messier 32Dwarf galaxy interacting with Andromeda Galaxy
169NGC 7236, NGC 7237, NGC 7237CGalaxy triplet
170NGC 7578
171NGC 5718, IC 1042
172IC 1178, IC 1181

Galaxies with narrow counter-tails

This is another category containing galaxies with tidal tails produced by gravitational interactions. These tidal tails are narrower and better defined than the tidal tails in objects 167–172.
Arp NumberCommon NameNotes
173UGC 9561
174NGC 3068
175IC 3481, IC 3481A, IC 3483Galaxy triplet
176NGC 4933Galaxy triplet
177Arp 177
178NGC 5613, NGC 5614, NGC 5615Galaxy triplet

Galaxies with narrow filaments

This category contains a mixture of different types of objects. Like the galaxies with diffuse filaments or galaxies with counter-tails, some of the galaxies in this category have been involved in interactions, and the filaments are tidal features created by those interactions. Other sources, however, are simply individual spiral galaxies with faint spiral arms that are described as "filaments" by Arp.
Arp NumberCommon NameNotes
179Arp 179
180Arp 180Interacting galaxy pair
181NGC 3212, NGC 3215Interacting galaxy pair
182NGC 7674, NGC 7674AInteracting galaxy pair
183UGC 8560Spiral galaxy
184NGC 1961Spiral galaxy
185NGC 6217Spiral galaxy
186NGC 1614Spiral galaxy involved in recent interaction
187Arp 187
188Tadpole GalaxyGalaxy involved in recent interaction
189NGC 4651Tidal star streams
190UGC 2320Interacting galaxy pair
191UGC 6175Interacting galaxy pair
192NGC 3303Interacting galaxy pair
193IC 883Merger remnant

Galaxies with material ejected from nuclei

The ejecta in many of these objects appear to be tidal features created by gravitational interactions. In some cases, the "ejecta" are clearly a spiral galaxy viewed edge-on that happens to line up with another galaxy's nucleus.
Almost all of the objects in this category are interacting or have recently undergone interactions. NGC 3712 is an exception; it is merely a low surface brightness spiral galaxy.
Arp NumberCommon NameNotes
194UGC 6945Interacting galaxy pair
195UGC 4653Interacting galaxy triplet
196Arp 196Interacting galaxy pair
197UGC 6503, IC 701Interacting galaxy pair
198UGC 6073Interacting galaxy pair
199NGC 5544, NGC 5545Interacting galaxy pair
200NGC 1134Spiral galaxy interacting with low surface brightness galaxy
201UGC 224Interacting galaxy pair
202NGC 2719, NGC 2719AInteracting galaxy pair
203NGC 3712Low surface brightness spiral galaxy
204UGC 8454Interacting galaxy pair
205NGC 3448Merger remnant
206UGC 5983, NGC 3432Interacting galaxy pair
207UGC 5050Spiral galaxy interacting with dwarf galaxy
208Arp 208Interacting galaxy pair

Galaxies with irregularities, absorption, and resolution

Galaxies in this category have either irregular structures, notable dust lanes, or a grainy appearance. This category contains a mix of interacting galaxies distorted by tidal interactions, nearby dwarf irregular galaxies, and spiral galaxies with unusual large amounts of gas.
Arp NumberCommon NameNotes
209NGC 6052Interacting galaxy pair
210NGC 1569Dwarf galaxy
211UGCA 290Interacting dwarf galaxies
212NGC 7625Peculiar spiral galaxy
213IC 356Peculiar spiral galaxy
214NGC 3718Peculiar spiral galaxy

Galaxies with adjacent loops

These adjacent loops are another manifestation of the structures formed by gravitational interactions between galaxies. Some of these sources consist of galaxies that have nearly completed the merger process; the "adjacent loops" are merely the remnants of the interaction. Among the objects in this category is Arp 220, one of the best-studied ultraluminous infrared galaxies in the sky.
Arp NumberCommon NameNotes
215NGC 2782Peculiar spiral galaxy
216NGC 7679, NGC 7682Interacting galaxy pair
217NGC 3310Notable nearby starburst; merger remnant
218Arp 218Interacting galaxy pair
219UGC 2812Galaxy in interaction
220IC 4553Merger remnant; notable ultraluminous infrared galaxy

Galaxies with amorphous spiral arms

Many of these galaxies are merger remnants. The "amorphous spiral arms" are the tidal debris that remains after the collision.
Arp NumberCommon NameNotes
221Arp 221Interacting galaxy triplet
222NGC 7727Merger remnant
223NGC 7585Recent inequal-mass merger
224NGC 3921Merger remnant
225NGC 2655Recent inequal-mass merger
226The Atoms for Peace Galaxy Merger remnant

Galaxies with concentric rings

These are galaxies with shell-like structures. Some shell structures have been identified as the results of recent mergers. In other cases, however, the shell structure may represent the outer disk of an S0 galaxy. In some complicated cases, the galaxy with the rings or shells is an S0 galaxy interacting with another galaxy; the origins of the shells in such systems can be difficult to determine.
Arp NumberCommon NameNotes
227NGC 470, NGC 474Interacting galaxy pair with one S0 galaxy
228IC 162S0 galaxy
229NGC 507, NGC 508Interacting galaxy pair including one S0 galaxy and one elliptical galaxy
230IC 51Peculiar S0 galaxy; possible merger remnant
231IC 1575
232NGC 2911Peculiar S0 galaxy

Galaxies with the appearance of fission

Although the description of the objects in this category implies that the galaxies are separating apart, most of these galaxies are merging. Many of the objects have very pronounced tidal tails and bridges that have formed as a consequence of the interaction. Most objects are in the early stages of the merging process, where the galaxies still appear to have distinct nuclei and distinct disks. Among the most notable galaxies in this category are the Antennae Galaxies and the Mice Galaxies.
However, not all of these objects are interacting galaxies. A few of these galaxies are simply nearby dwarf galaxies with irregular structure.
Arp NumberCommon NameNotes
233UGC 5720Dwarf galaxy
234NGC 3738Dwarf galaxy
235NGC 14Dwarf galaxy
236IC 1623Interacting galaxy pair
237UGC 5044Interacting galaxy pair
238UGC 8335Interacting galaxy pair
239NGC 5278, NGC 5279Interacting galaxy pair
240NGC 5257, NGC 5258Interacting galaxy pair
241UGC 9425Interacting galaxy pair
242Mice Galaxies Interacting galaxy pair
243NGC 2623Interacting galaxy triplet
244Antennae Galaxies Interacting galaxy pair
245NGC 2992, NGC 2993Interacting galaxy pair
246NGC 7837, NGC 7838Interacting galaxy pair
247UGC 4383Interacting galaxy pair
248Arp 248Interacting galaxy triplet
249UGC 12891Interacting galaxy pair
250Arp 250
251Arp 251Interacting galaxy triplet
252Arp 252Interacting galaxy pair
253UGCA 173, UGCA 174Interacting galaxy pair
254NGC 5917Peculiar spiral galaxy
255UGC 5304Interacting galaxy pair
256Arp 256Interacting galaxy pair

Galaxies with irregular clumps

These are objects that appear to be a series of irregular clumps with no coherent structure. Many of these objects are simply nearby dwarf galaxies. Some of these objects are interacting galaxies, while others are small groups of galaxies. In both cases, many of the constituent galaxies are irregular galaxies. The superposition of two or more such irregular galaxies can easily look like a single larger irregular galaxy, which is why the Atlas of Peculiar Galaxies often classify these pairs and groups as single objects.
Arp NumberCommon NameNotes
257UGC 4638Interacting galaxy pair
258UGC 2140Galaxy group
259NGC 1741Galaxy group
260UGC 7230Interacting galaxy pair
261Arp 261Galaxy group
262UGC 12856Interacting galaxy pair
263NGC 3239Dwarf galaxy
264NGC 3104Dwarf galaxy
265IC 3862Interacting galaxy pair
266NGC 4861Dwarf galaxy
267UGC 5746Dwarf galaxy
268UGC 4305, Holmberg IIDwarf galaxy

Double and multiple galaxies

Arp originally referred to these galaxies as "double galaxies", but many of these sources are more than two galaxies. Some of the objects consist of interacting galaxies, whereas other sources are actually groups of galaxies. The difference is that interacting galaxies will be distorted, whereas galaxies in groups are simply gravitationally bound to each other but not necessarily close enough to each other to induce major structural changes.

Galaxies with connected arms

All of these galaxies are interacting pairs of galaxies except for NGC 5679, which may be an interacting galaxy triplet.
The connected arms described here are tidal bridge features that form between interacting galaxies. These bridges form early during galaxy interactions.
Arp NumberCommon NameNotes
269NGC 4485, NGC 4490Interacting galaxy pair
270NGC 3395, NGC 3396Interacting galaxy pair
271NGC 5426, NGC 5427Interacting galaxy pair
272NGC 6050, IC 1179Interacting galaxy pair
273UGC 1810, UGC 1813Interacting galaxy pair
274NGC 5679Interacting galaxy triplet

Interacting galaxies

Unlike many of the objects listed in the amorphous galaxies section, the interacting galaxies that comprise these objects are still distinguishable from each other.
Arp NumberCommon NameNotes
275NGC 2881Interacting galaxy pair
276NGC 935, IC 1801Interacting galaxy pair
277NGC 4809, NGC 4810Interacting galaxy pair
278NGC 7253Interacting galaxy pair
279NGC 1253, NGC 1253AInteracting galaxy pair
280NGC 3769, NGC 3769AInteracting galaxy pair

Galaxies with infall and attraction

This category contains an odd mixture of objects. Two of the objects are edge-on disk galaxies with smaller companion galaxies nearby. Two of the objects are connected by tidal bridges. The last two objects may simply be interacting with each other over long distance.
Arp NumberCommon NameNotes
281NGC 4627, NGC 4631Spiral galaxy with companion dwarf elliptical galaxy
282NGC 169, NGC 169ASpiral galaxy with smaller companion galaxy
283NGC 2798, NGC 2799Interacting galaxy pair
284NGC 7714, NGC 7715Interacting galaxy pair
285NGC 2854, NGC 2856Galaxy pair
286NGC 5560, NGC 5566, NGC 5569Interacting galaxy triplet

Galaxies with wind effects

Although included in the double galaxies category, many of these objects are individual galaxies. The "wind effects" refer to the appearance, not the actual detection of high-velocity gas. In some cases, the appearance may be the result of interaction. In other cases, particularly NGC 3981, the faint, extended emission may be related to the intrinsic nature of the galaxy itself and not interactions with other objects.
Arp NumberCommon NameNotes
287NGC 2735, NGC 2735AGalaxy pair
288NGC 5221, NGC 5222Galaxy triplet
289NGC 3981Peculiar spiral galaxy
290IC 195, IC 196Interacting galaxy pair
291UGC 5832Irregular galaxy
292IC 575Peculiar spiral galaxy
293NGC 6285, NGC 6286Interacting galaxy pair

Double or multiple galaxies with long filaments

The long filaments in these systems are probably tidal tails or bridges that have been produced as the result of the gravitational interaction between the galaxies.
Arp NumberCommon NameNotes
294NGC 3786, NGC 3788Interacting galaxy pair
295Arp 295Interacting galaxy pair
296Arp 296
297Arp 297Interacting galaxies within a galaxy group

Unclassified objects

Arp did not give a subclassification for objects 298–310 in his atlas. These objects are mostly interacting galaxy pairs.
Arp NumberCommon NameDescription
298NGC 7469, IC 5283Galaxy pair
299Arp 299Galaxy triplet
300Arp 300Galaxy group
301UGC 6204, UGC 6207Galaxy pair
302UGC 9618Galaxy pair
303IC 563, IC 564Galaxy pair
304NGC 1241, NGC 1242Galaxy pair
305NGC 4016, NGC 4017Galaxy pair
306UGC 1102Galaxy group with two galaxy pairs
307NGC 2872, NGC 2874Galaxy pair
308NGC 545, NGC 547Galaxy pair
309NGC 942, NGC 943Galaxy pair
310IC 1259Galaxy pair

Groups of galaxies

Arp NumberCommon NameDescription
311IC 1258 and Companions
312MCG +08-31-004
313NGC 3994 + NGC 3995
314MCG -03-58-009 + MCG -03-58-010 + MCG -03-58-011
315NGC 2830 + NGC 2831 + NGC 2832
316NGC 3187 + NGC 3190 + NGC 3193
317Leo Triplet
318NGC 833 and companions
319Stephan's Quintet
320Copeland's Septet
321Hickson 40 A-E

Chains of galaxies

Arp NumberCommon NameDescription
322UGC 6527
323Hickson 98 A-D
324UGC 10143
325ESO601-G018A+B and MCG -04-52-014
326UGC 8610
327NGC 1875; Hickson 34 A-D
328UGC 9532; Hickson 72
329UGC 6514
330I Zw 167; MCG +09-27-094
331NGC 379 and companions
332NGC 1228 + NGC 1229 + NGC 1230 + IC 1892

Miscellaneous

Arp NumberCommon NameDescription
333NGC 1024
334UGC 8498
335NGC 3509
336NGC 2685
337Messier 82
338PGC 3094767

Brightest Arp galaxies for amateur astronomers

, an amateur astronomer and occasional writer, has compiled a list of the brightest Arp Galaxies that are most easily viewed by typical amateur astronomers. The galaxies on the list can be observed visually and do not require special photographic or imaging equipment. These include: