Astronomy:NGC 504

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Short description: Lenticular galaxy in the constellation Pisces
NGC 504
NGC 504
SDSS view of NGC 504
Observation data (J2000[1] epoch)
ConstellationPisces[2]
Right ascension 01h 23m 27.9s[3]
Declination+33° 12′ 16″[3]
Redshift0.014096 ± 0.000270[1]
Helio radial velocity(4196 ± 81) km/s[1]
Distance189 Mly[4]
Apparent magnitude (V)13.0[2]
Apparent magnitude (B)14.0[2]
Characteristics
TypeS0[2]
Apparent size (V)1.7' × 0.4'[2]
Other designations
PGC 5084, UGC 935, GC 291, GC 292, MGC +05-04-041, 2MASS J01232787+3312152, h 107[1][5]

NGC 504, also occasionally referred to as PGC 5084 or UGC 935, is a lenticular galaxy located approximately 189 million light-years from the Solar System[4] in the constellation Pisces.[2] It was discovered on 22 November 1827 by astronomer John Herschel. The object was listed twice in the General Catalogue, precursor of the New General Catalogue, as both GC 291 and GC 292.[5]

Observation history

Herschel discovered the object without recording a visual description. However, he noted the nebula "precedes NGC 507 by about 10 seconds and is half a field to the south of it". NGC 504 was later also independently discovered by Heinrich d'Arrest, using an 11" reflecting telescope in Copenhagen and assuming the object was new. This led to Herschel cataloguing the two observations separately as GC 291 and GC 292.[6] The objects were later combined by John Louis Emil Dreyer with the creation of the New General Catalogue, in which the galaxy was described as "very faint, small".[5]

See also

References

External links


Coordinates: Sky map 01h 23m 27.9s, +33° 12′ 16″