NGC/IC Project Restoration Effort
(This is a very very beta version)
NGC5941
Basic Information
Location and Magnitude
Right Ascension: 15:31:40.3
Declination: +7:20:20
Constellation: SER
Visual Magnitude: 13.9
Historic Information
Discoverer: Swift L.
Year of discovery: 1887
Discovery aperture: 16.0
Observational
Summary description: eeF, S, R, 2nd of 4
Sub-type: S0
Corwin's Notes
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NGC 5941, 5942, and 5944. These are three of a group of four nebulae found by
Lewis Swift on 19 April 1887 (the brightest of the four is NGC 5940, about
which there is no identity question). Bigourdan observed these two years
later, but found that N5941 was north-following N5942, rather than north-
preceding as Swift's positions would suggest.
Confusingly, CGCG and MCG call Bigourdan's N5942 "N5941," and point to yet
another galaxy as "N5942." RNGC and Hickson followed CGCG in their NGC
identifications, but Steve Gottlieb also questions their choice of N5941.
The problems have arisen because of Swift's poor positions which are
systematically north-preceding the true positions of the galaxies. In
addition, the galaxies are in the core of the rich cluster Abell 2085.
Hickson catalogued them -- and several fainter ones in the area -- as his
compact group number 76. Among these are four that Swift could conceiveably
have seen. Steve's observations suggest that Hickson 076b (the brightest) is
NGC 5941, 076d (the second brightest) is N5942, and 076a is N5944. Bigourdan
used the same identifications except for N5942; he put this number on Hickson
076c. Since this object is half a magnitude brighter than d, this seems a
more plausible choice.
Swift's descriptions provide little help except that he notes N5941 as "ee
dif(ficult)" and N5942 as "eee dif." This would suggest that N5941 is the
brighter of the two (as noted by Bigourdan) -- but that would make it the 3rd
of 4, rather than the 2nd as Swift notes. I'm inclined to follow Bigourdan's
suggestion, however, even if it places the objects out of Swift's order. The
first brightest is enough brighter than the others that both Steve and I would
be very surprised if it were not among the galaxies that Swift observed here.
So, with some uncertainty, I am going to call NGC 5941 = Hickson 76b, NGC 5942
= Hickson 76c, and NGC 5944 = Hickson 76a. This leaves Hickson 76d without an
NGC number; while it is not the faintest of the four, it does have a lower
surface brightness which -- combined with its relatively faint magnitude --
would make it the least visible of the four objects in question.
Steve's Notes
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NGC 5941
18" (8/3/05): the brightest member of HCG 76 appeared faint, small, oval 4:3 SW-NE, 0.5'x0.35', contains a very small brighter core. Forms the northern vertex of a rectangular quartet with NGC 5942, NGC 5944 and MCG +01-40-002. Although visually the brightest in the group, this galaxy does not receive a NGC designation in any modern catalogue.
17.5" (7/7/94): faint, fairly small, elongated 4:3 SW-NE, 0.7'x0.5', weak concentration to a brighter core, faint stellar nucleus. This is the brightest galaxy in HCG 76 with NGC 5944 2.6' SE, MCG +01-40-002 = HCG 76d and NGC 5942 1.8' SSW. This galaxy is not identified as NGC 5941 in any modern catalogue.