NGC/IC Project Restoration Effort

(This is a very very beta version)

NGC3537

 

Basic Information


Location and Magnitude


Right Ascension: 11:8:26.5
Declination: -10:15:24
Constellation: CRT
Visual Magnitude: 12.8

Historic Information


Discoverer: Tempel
Year of discovery: 1878
Discovery aperture: 11.0

Observational


Summary description: vF, S, vF st inv
Sub-type: Sab

Corwin's Notes

===== NGC 3537 is an interacting galaxy pair about 15 arcmin north-northwest of N3541, and may have been found by Ainslie Common on the same night that he found the latter (though he does not give us the dates of his observations). His position and description is pretty good, being only about 1.5 arcmin off in Dec. The NGC position is even better, coming from two micrometric measurements by Tempel in 1881 and 1882. Nevertheless, RNGC has misidentified it, giving the number to the galaxy that is properly called NGC 3541 (which see). Curiously, Vorontsov-Velyaminov skipped over the object for MCG, though he has included many other even fainter interacting pairs as well as N3541. There is a bit of a mystery about Tempel's observations, too. He lists them as separate entries in his table of new nebulae in his fifth paper with no indication that they might refer to the same object. However, his positions -- once precessed to a common equinox -- are within a few arcsec of being identical. Tempel mentions a "star" on one side of the nebula in his second observation, but not the first. The nebula is described as fainter the first night, too, being a (WH) class III nebula rather than class II-III. On both nights, however, he mentions a faint "star" in the middle of the nebula. I suspect that both his observations apply to the brighter of the two galaxies; the "star" on the side of the nebula is almost certainly the fainter object, seen only on the better night.

Steve's Notes

===== NGC 3537 17.5" (5/4/02): fairly faint, fairly small, irregularly round, ~1.0'x0.8', moderate surface brightness, weak concentration to an irregular nucleus. This is a double system with a superimposed companion on the south side. Located 8' W of mag 8.7 SAO 138012. NGC 3527 is misidentified in the RNGC and MCG as MCG -02-29-003 which is located 14' S (see visual observation).