NGC/IC Project Restoration Effort

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NGC1032

 

Basic Information


Location and Magnitude


Right Ascension: 2:39:23.6
Declination: +1:5:38
Constellation: CET
Visual Magnitude: 11.6

Historic Information


Discoverer: Herschel W.
Year of discovery: 1783
Discovery aperture: 18.7

Observational


Summary description: pB, S, vlE, bM, 3 st trap
Sub-type: S0-a

Corwin's Notes

===== NGC 1032. See NGC 1037.

Steve's Notes

===== NGC 1032 48" (10/26/11): at 385x and 488x appears very bright, large, very elongated 4:1 WSW-ENE, 3.0'x0.8'. Well concentrated with a prominent, bulging oval core that brightens towards the center and long, thin, fainter tapering extensions that dim at the tips. A mag 13 star is at the tip of the ENE extension. The visual treat, though, is a razor thin dust lane that clearly bisects the large central buge. As the much fainter extensions start to taper down, the dust lane loses contrast and disappears towards the ends. 18" (1/15/07): fairly bright, fairly large, very elongated 3:1 WSW-ENE, 2.8'x0.9'. Well concentrated with a bright core that increases to a quasi-stellar nucleus. The galaxy extends to a mag 12.5 star at the ENE edge making the total length nearly 2.8'. The thin dust lane seen on images was not visible. 17.5" (10/29/94): fairly bright, fairly large, very elongated 4:1 WSW-ENE, 2.5'x0.6'. Dominated by a bright core which is broadly concentrated and contains a faint stellar nucleus. The extensions are smooth and unconcentrated. A mag 12.5-13 star is at the ENE edge 1.4' from the center and two mag 13 stars are along the north side (1.8' NE and 1.3' NNW of center) forming a right triangle. 8": faint, small, very elongated WSW-ENE, weak concentration. Four mag 13 stars to north including one 1.8' NE.