New General Catalogue

astronomical catalogue of deep sky objects

The New General Catalogue of Nebulae and Clusters of Stars[1] is a list of stars, nebulae and galaxies. It is abbreviated NGC, and is sometimes called just New General Catalogue. It has 7,840[1] objects on it. These objects are called "NGC objects". It was created by John Louis Emil Dreyer in 1888. Like the older, smaller Messier catalog, it is a famous deep-sky catalogue for amateur astronomy. Most of observations were rewarded by William Herschel and his son, and expanded by the known catalogue Index Catalogues I and II, adding about 5000 new objects. South Hemisphere objects are less studied than North Hemisphere objects, observed by John Herschel. The New General Catalogue had some mistakes, that were corrected in a special revised edition: RNGC

Spiral galaxy NGC 3982, with blue clusters and dark regions. You can see this galaxy with a little telescope in Ursa Major constellation
NGC 7814, spiral galaxy in Pegasus constellation. It has more than 15 denominations
The Andromeda Galaxy or NGC 224 is one of the most visible, known and brightest galaxies.

NGC 2000.0

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It's a copy of NGC objects using J2000.0 coordenates created in 1988[2]


References

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  1. 1.0 1.1 "The NGC/IC Project". Archived from the original on 2012-12-18. Retrieved 2016-10-24.
  2. "NGC/IC Free Star Charts".

Other websites

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