NGC 490, also occasionally referred to as PGC 4973 or GC 277, is a lenticular galaxy in the constellation Pisces.[1] It is located approximately 85 million light-years from Earth and was discovered on December 6, 1850, by Irish engineer Bindon Blood Stoney.[2] Although John Dreyer, creator of the New General Catalogue, credits the discovery to astronomer William Parsons, he notes that many of his claimed discoveries were made by one of his assistants. In the case of NGC 490, the discovery was made by Bindon Stoney,[3] who discovered it along with NGC 486, NGC 492 and NGC 500 during his observation of NGC 488. [4]

NGC 490
NGC 490
SDSS view of NGC 490
Observation data (J2000 epoch)
ConstellationPisces
Right ascension01h 22m 02.87s
Declination+05° 22′ 01.9″
Redshift0.00742 ± 0.00006
Heliocentric radial velocity(+2217 ± 17) km/s
Distance85 Mly
Apparent magnitude (V)14.4
Characteristics
TypeS0/a?
Apparent size (V)0.7′ × 0.5′
Other designations
PGC 4973, GC 277, 2MASS J01220285+0522021, MCG +01-04-035

The object was initially described in the New General Catalogue as "very faint, very small, round, 8 arcmin northeast of h 103 (=NGC 488)".[3]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Revised NGC Data for NGC 490". spider.seds.org. Retrieved 2017-10-05.
  2. ^ "Your NED Search Results". ned.ipac.caltech.edu. Retrieved 2017-10-05.
  3. ^ a b "New General Catalog Objects: NGC 450 - 499". cseligman.com. Retrieved 2017-10-16.
  4. ^ "astronomy-mall.com/Adventures.In.Deep.Space/NGC%201-7840%20complete.htm". Astronomy Mall.

External links edit