NGC 506

NGC 506 is a star in the constellation Pisces.[1] It was discovered on 7 November 1874 by Lawrence Parsons, the 4th Earl of Rosse.[2]

NGC 506

NGC 360 as seen on Sloan Digital Sky Survey
Observation data
Epoch J2000.0[1]      Equinox
Constellation Pisces[1]
Right ascension  01h 23m 35.5s[1]
Declination +33° 14 38[1]
Apparent magnitude (V) 14.9[2]

Observation history

Lawrence discovered the object during his last observation of the NGC 499 Group. Though he noted no description, he gave a micrometric measure setting the object's position relative to a different nearby star. There is no object at this position, but the NGC position is corrected further southeast which leads to the assumption that John Louis Emil Dreyer, creator of the New General Catalogue, had additional information when he catalogued the star.[3] In the catalogue, the object is described as "very faint, very small, southwest of NGC 507".[2]

gollark: ↑ is cooler.
gollark: I don't think the search option will work from the archive. You probably need the URL of the thread.
gollark: How strange.
gollark: Why the [REDACT]ing, I mean. I don't see any rules about projectors or whatever.
gollark: (not the exact thing)

See also

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.