Galaxy NGC 2950

NGC 2950
NGC 2950: Section of the Sloan Digitized Sky Survey [147]

History

This galaxy was discovered by William Herschel on 19 March 1790 using his 18.3-inch reflecting telescope. He listed it as fourth class: planetary nebulae, stars with burs, with milky chevelures, with short rays, remarkable shapes, etc. using the designation IV 68: He noted: «Very bright, small, exactly round, bright nucleus in the middle, very faint cheveulure very gradually joining to the north. In a lower situation the chevelure might not be visible, and this nebula would then appear like an ill defined planetary one.» [465]

His son John observed the nebula twice and listed it as h 616: For sweep 323 (9 February 1831) he noted: «Small, round, very suddenly very much brighter in the middle, yet not to a nucleus.» For sweep 404 (13 April 1831) he noted: «pretty bright; round; suddenly much brighter in the middle; almost to a star. Has a star 11m 20.0s preceding and 15 or 20" north. Right ascension very precarious.» [466]

Physical Properties

Revised+Historic NGC/IC Version 22/9, © 2022 Dr. Wolfgang Steinicke [277]
DesignationNGC 2950
TypeGx (SB0)
Right Ascension (J2000.0)09h 42m 34.8s
Declination (J2000.0)+58° 51' 05"
Diameter2.7 × 1.8 arcmin
Photographic (blue) magnitude11.8 mag
Visual magnitude10.9 mag
Surface brightness12.5 mag·arcmin-2
Position Angle145°
Redshift (z)0.004460
Distance derived from z18.84 Mpc
Metric Distance19.100 Mpc
Dreyer DescriptionB, pS, R, vgvmbMN
Identification, RemarksWH IV 68; h 616; GC 1888; UGC 5176; MCG 10-14-32; CGCG 289-16

Finder Chart

The galaxy NGC 2950 is located in the constellation Ursa Maior. On 13 February it is in opposition with the Sun and is therefore highest in the sky at local midnight.

Ursa Maior: Galaxy NGC 2950
Finder Chart Galaxy NGC 2950
12:02
17:25 | 31.3°
22:47
Charts created using Cartes du Ciel (Skychart) and STScI Digitized Sky Survey. Limiting magnitudes: Constellation chart ~6.5 mag, DSS2 close-ups ~20 mag. Times are shown for timezone UTC, Latitude 0°, Longitude 0°, Horizon height 5°, Date 2026-05-27. [96, 160]

Objects Within a Radius of 15°

References

  • [96] Cartes du Ciel (Skychart); Patrick Chevalley; ap-i.net/skychart/en/start
  • [147] Aladin Sky Atlas, Centre de Données astronomiques de Strasbourg (CDS); aladin.unistra.fr
  • [160] The STScI Digitized Sky Survey; archive.stsci.edu/cgi-bin/dss_form
  • [277] Historische Deep-Sky Kataloge; Dr. Wolfgang Steinicke; klima-luft.de/steinicke; 2021-02-17
  • [465] Catalogue of 500 new nebulae, nebulous stars, planetary nebula:, and clusters of stars; with remarks on the construction of the heavens; William Herschel; Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, 1 January 1802; DOI:10.1098/rstl.1802.0021
  • [466] Observations of nebulæ and clusters of stars, made at Slough, with a twenty-feet reflector, between the years 1825 and 1833; John Frederick William Herschel; Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London, 1 January 1833, Pages: 359-505; DOI:10.1098/rstl.1833.0021