NGC 3000
Appearance
NGC3000 | |
---|---|
Observation data (J2000epoch) | |
Constellation | Ursa Major |
Right ascension | 09h 48m 51s |
Declination | +44° 07’ 49” |
Distance | 168Mly(51.66 Mpc) |
Apparent magnitude(V) | 10.88 |
Apparent magnitude(B) | 11 |
Characteristics | |
Type | SB(r)bc |
Notable features | N/A |
Other designations | |
PGC 5067534 |
NGC 3000is adouble starlocated in theconstellation Ursa Major.[1]It was first discovered and observed byBindon Stoney(William Parsons' assistant) on January 25, 1851[2]and catalogued as a nebula-type object. It has been monitored by multiple different telescopes since its discovery.
Discovery
[edit]Stoney first described NGC 3000 as a "very faint, small, irregularly round, mottled but not resolved" galaxy. The position of NGC 3000 precesses to RA 09 49 02.6, Dec +44 08 46, but there is nothing there. However, all of Stoney's positions for objects in this region are about 2 arcmin east northeast of the actual object, and a correction for that apparently consistent error falls almost exactly on the pair of stars listed.[3]
References
[edit]- ^Ford, Dominic."The New General Catalogue (NGC) in Ursa Major".In-The-Sky.org.Retrieved2024-03-20.
- ^"NGC 3000".spider.seds.org.Retrieved2024-03-20.
- ^"New General Catalog Objects: NGC 3000 - 3049".cseligman.com.Retrieved2024-03-20.
External links
[edit]- Media related toNGC 3000at Wikimedia Commons