NGC/IC Project Restoration Effort
(This is a very very beta version)
NGC1988
Basic Information
Location and Magnitude
Right Ascension: 5:37:26.5
Declination: +21:13:7
Constellation: TAU
Visual Magnitude: 11.0
Historic Information
Discoverer: Chacornac
Year of discovery: 1855
Discovery aperture: 10.0
Observational
Summary description: !!!, variable (?)
Sub-type: *
Corwin's Notes
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NGC 1988. Suspected of variability by its discoverer (Chacornac, in 1855),
this has never been seen by any other observer. Dreyer has a brief history in
the NGC Notes. The NGC position comes from GC where JH gives a source as
"Les Mondes, No. 9." This was apparently a short-lived journal or newsletter;
there is no trace of it in the indexes of major astronomical libraries in the
US, nor in the library of the Paris Observatory. Fortunately, Chacornac also
published his position in Comptes Rendus 56, 637, 1863, a publication which is
still very much with us.
The only things in the area on the POSS1 are two or three stars. Chacornac's
accurate position corresponds to the western-most of the the stars, a 10th
magnitude object with two much fainter companions just a few arcsec east. My
guess is that the "object" was perhaps a reflection or flare from zeta Tauri
which is only 5 arcmin to the southeast, possibly enhanced by the faint stars
around the 10th magnitude "primary."