M104, aka NGC 4594, and commonly referred to as the “Sombrero Galaxy”, is an unbarred spiral galaxy in Virgo, about 30 million light years distant, and probably 1/3 the size of the Milky Way. It is quite bright, and should be visible with 7×35 binoculars. The “sombrero” portion is sandwiched in a bright halo, which might be more consistent with a large elliptical galaxy(?). The nucleus is thought to contain a supermassive black hole, and the galaxy itself also has a large number of globular clusters.
For those who remember the 1960’s TV show “The Outer limits”, an image of M104 was in the ending credits.
Technical details are as follows:
Image by SSRO/PROMPT/CTIO in 2009 using a 16″ RCOS at f/11.3, Apogee U9, SBIG 402 guider, and Paramount ME. Image scale 0.41″/pixel. LRGB with 3.5 hrs lum, 3 hrs/channel RGB. Calibration in Maxim, alignment/integration in PixInsight, deconvolution in PixInsight, and everything else in Photoshop.