NGC/IC Project Restoration Effort
(This is a very very beta version)
NGC2885
Basic Information
Location and Magnitude
Right Ascension: 9:27:18.4
Declination: +23:1:12
Constellation: LEO
Visual Magnitude: 13.9
Historic Information
Discoverer: Herschel J.
Year of discovery: 1827
Discovery aperture: 18.3
Observational
Summary description: eF, vS, E 90°
Sub-type: S0-a
Corwin's Notes
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NGC 2885 = IC 538. John Herschel saw this on only one night. The RA is
marked with a plus-minus sign, and his description reads, "eF, vS, E in
parallel; RA very uncertain." His description is correct, and his RA is
indeed about 25 seconds too large (there is nothing in his estimated place,
not even a star). The comment "... E in parallel ..." (that is, the
position angle is 90 deg) fits no other galaxy in the area. This is also the
brightest galaxy around, so the identification is secure.
Bigourdan made four observations of his "nova" Big. 154, the object that
became the IC galaxy -- his reduced position is right on NGC 2885 itself. He
also claims to have glimpsed "NGC 2885" (on one night only; on another night,
he has this as "Non vue" [not seen]) about 1.4 arcmin north of JH's place.
But as with JH position, there is nothing there, not even a star.
Finally, R.S. Ball saw this galaxy and two companions on 10 January 1867. The
story is told in the "notngc" files.
Steve's Notes
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NGC 2885
17.5" (4/13/91): faint, very small, round, stellar nucleus. A mag 15 star is 40" E of center and a mag 14 star is 2' NW. Located 8' NW of mag 8.5 SAO 80841. Brightest in a trio with CGCG 121-099 1.8' ENE and IC 2474 1.8' NW. Incorrect identification in RNGC.