LEDA 2108986

LEDA 2108986,[3] also known by its Case Western Reserve University designation "Case Galaxy 611" (CG 611),[4] is an extremely isolated, early-type dwarf galaxy[5][6][7] with an embedded spiral structure residing in what is likely an intermediate-scale disk.

[8] The galaxy was discovered in 1987 by Sanduleak and Pesch, and is located at a distance of about 45.7 megaparsecs (149,000,000 ly) in the Boötes Void and has no significant neighbours within 2.5 Mpc.

In the case of LEDA 74886, that disk is orientated edge-on to our line-of-sight.

It also displays a young spiral pattern within this stellar disk.

The extreme isolation of LEDA 2108986 is proof that dwarf early-type galaxies can be built by accretion events, as opposed to disk-stripping scenarios within the "galaxy harassment" model.