By luka milevoj | 2022-02-22
![Community photo entitled by Filipp Romanov on 02/17/2022 at Remotely using iTelescope T32, Siding Spring Observatory, Australia](https://earthsky.org/upl/gravity_forms/6-d184048789a60d766a02a8e43117298b/2022/02/Image.jpg)
On 02/17/2022 04:24 pm by Filipp Romanov| Remotely using iTelescope T32, Siding Spring Observatory, Australia
A unique astronomical phenomenon occurs in the sky: there are three supernovae in one galaxy (NGC 5605). All of them were discovered by ATLAS in January 2022: SN 2022bn (type Ib) on 2022-01-05 https://www.wis-tns.org/object/2022bn , SN 2022ec (type II) on 2022-01-07 https://www.wis-tns.org/object/2022ec and SN 2022pv (type II) on 2022-01-14 https://www.wis-tns.org/object/2022pv . I obtained the photos of this galaxy (in the constellation of Libra) remotely using 0.43-m f/6.8 reflector T32 (of iTelescope.Net) at Siding Spring Observatory, Australia. I attach stacked image (12x180 sec. with luminance filter) with mid time 2022-02-17 16:24 UTC. True, they are all now fainter than 18 magnitudes in brightness, but this can still be seen in photographs with long exposures.