NGC/IC Project Restoration Effort
(This is a very very beta version)
NGC321
Basic Information
Location and Magnitude
Right Ascension: 0:57:39.2
Declination: -5:5:9
Constellation: CET
Visual Magnitude: 15.0
Historic Information
Discoverer: Marth
Year of discovery: 1864
Discovery aperture: 48.0
Observational
Summary description: eF, vS
Sub-type: SBcd
Corwin's Notes
=====
NGC 321. The mess with this number is partly my fault. While working on RC2,
I noticed that there is nothing at the (incorrect) RC1 position of "A0055."
However, MCG -01-03-041 is just one degree south and 0.1 minute east of the
RC1 position. I immediately jumped at this, and followed MCG in
misidentifying the galaxy as N321. Early versions of ESGC perpetuate the
error.
However, the real NGC 321 is actually MCG -01-03-043 (which MCG calls N325,
but that is MCG -01-03-45; are we confused yet?!). It was found by Marth in
August or September of 1864, and is the first -- and faintest -- of four. The
others are NGC 325 = MCG -01-03-045, N327 = MCG -01-03-047, and N329 = MCG
-01-03-048. Marth's positions are very good, and his brief descriptions are
appropriate. Even so, MCG managed to misidentify the first two of the four.
By the way: the galaxy called "A0055" in RC1 is MCG -01-03-041 (I got the
correct object, but put the wrong name on it). This object is the parent
galaxy of SN 1939D, discovered by Zwicky (see Harvard Announcement Card #518),
and included in his sample in ApJ 96, 28, 1942. He gives a relatively coarse
position (00h 54m, -05d 20m; labeled "1938.0" in the ApJ paper, but
"1939.0" in the HAC) which is nevertheless good enough to pinpoint MCG
-01-03-041 as the correct galaxy. He notes the type as "Sb" in ApJ; he
classified it on the 18-inch Schmidt film on which the supernova was found.
ESGC calls it "SB(r)c pec" from a glass copy of the 48-inch POSS1 plate, in
pretty good agreement. Zwicky also says in the HAC, "The spiral in which [the
supernova] appears belongs to a small group of nebulae including N321, N325,
N327, [and] N329 at the estimated distance of 7 million parsecs." Thus, the
galaxy cannot be N321, so we can take his position as correct and pointing at
MCG -01-03-041. (MCG -01-03-042 = Mark 966 is 4.0 arcmin on to the northeast,
and is compact and overexposed on the POSS1, showing little trace of spiral
structure; it would have been nearly stellar on the 18-inch films.)
Steve's Notes
=====
NGC 321
24" (12/1/13): faint, very small, round, 15" diameter. Easily visible 1.5' SE of a mag 12.5 star and 5.7' WSW of NGC 329 in a group.
17.5" (12/11/99): very faint, very small, round, 15" diameter. The faintest of 5 galaxies in the field (NGC 325 = MCG -01-03-045 not seen in very soft seeing) including NGC 327 4.8' SE, MCG -01-03-041 5.1' NNW and NGC 329 5.7' WNW. Located 1.4' SE of a mag 12 star.
13.1" (7/12/86): very faint, small, round.