NGC/IC Project Restoration Effort
(This is a very very beta version)
NGC3565
Basic Information
Location and Magnitude
Right Ascension: 11:7:47.8
Declination: -20:1:20
Constellation: CRT
Visual Magnitude: 14.3
Historic Information
Discoverer: Stone
Year of discovery: 1886
Discovery aperture: 26.3
Observational
Summary description: vF, vS, R, gbMN, 1st of 2
Sub-type: E/SB0
Corwin's Notes
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NGC 3565 and NGC 3566. These two objects were given the same poor position by
Ormond Stone in the first Leander McCormick list. The identification with the
close pair of galaxies listed in the table was made by noting that many of the
first list nebulae were placed about two minutes of time too far west.
Subtracting two minutes from the RA puts the position very close to the faint
pair.
The identification of this pair as NGC 3565 and 3566 is obviously not very
secure because the discovery position is poor, and there are no sketches of
the objects among Stone's papers.
Another possibility is that N3565 and 3566 are identical to IC 2623 and the
star superposed just south. However, this would require a 4 minute error in
Stone's RA, as well as a 4 minute declination error. While a few of the
Leander McCormick positions are indeed this far off, I think that this
possibility is less likely.
Still -- I've been bothered by the identification of the pair as Stone's
objects because they are so close together, and because the optical and
infrared sky surveys show an apparent nucleus BETWEEN the two components.
This strongly suggests that there is but one peculiar galaxy here. Hence the
question marks. I have to question, too -- if this is indeed Stone's pair --
whether he could see both objects.
Steve's Notes
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NGC 3565
18" (3/17/07): very faint, very small, slightly elongated, 20"x15". Located 13' WNW a mag 8.3 HD 96800. The identification of this galaxy with NGC 3565 is not certain and the number (along with NGC 3566) may apply to IC 2623 and a star just south. Listed as nonexistent in the RNGC.