sponsored by psychohistorian.org
Type: galaxy, Sb
Mag: B=14.1, V=?
Size: 1.862′ x 0.407′
PA: 50°
Synonyms: H III-644
Discovered in 1787 by William Herschel with an 18.7-inch f/13 speculum telescope. He called it "vF, vS, E, confirmed with 300 power." In the Notes to the 'Catalogue of a Second Thousand of New Nebulae and Cluster of Stars' a comment reads: "vF, vS, E, 300 confirmed it, but shewed two small round patches united, which seemed to be like vF aberrations of two stars without the stars. I viewed them with many different adjustments of the focus."
The RNGC (Sulentic and Tifft 1973) notes that this is a 14.0 mag galaxy. Their coded description reads S,MINC,EL,UHISB WK SSTR DSK.
Lacaille's catalogue
The Messier objects
Dunlop's catalogue
The Bennett objects
The Caldwell list
Named DSOs
DOCdb is still in beta-release.
Known issues, feature requests, and updates on bug fixes, are here:
Found a bug? Have a comment or suggestion to improve DOCdb? Please let us know!
DOCdb is a free online resource that exists to promote deep sky observing.
You could help by sharing your observations, writing an article, digitizing and proof-reading historical material, and more.
Everything on DOCdb.net is © 2004-2010 by Auke Slotegraaf, unless stated otherwise or if you can prove you have divine permission to use it. Before using material published here, please consult the Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.5 License. Some material on DOCdb is copyright the individual authors. If in doubt, don't reproduce. And that goes for having children, too. Please note that the recommended browser for DOCdb is Firefox 3.x. You may also get good results with K-Meleon. Good luck if you're using IE. A successful experience with other browsers, including Opera and Safari, may vary.