NGC/IC Project Restoration Effort
(This is a very very beta version)
NGC6071
Basic Information
Location and Magnitude
Right Ascension: 16:2:6.9
Declination: +70:25:2
Constellation: UMI
Visual Magnitude: 13.9
Historic Information
Discoverer: Herschel W.
Year of discovery: 1791
Discovery aperture: 18.7
Observational
Summary description: eF, vS
Sub-type: E-S0
Corwin's Notes
=====
NGC 6071 and NGC 6079 = IC 1200 are two of the brighter galaxies in a group or
scattered cluster. Both were found by WH on 6 May 1791, and positions for
both were referred to 13 UMi = SAO 008220. Neither place has a galaxy in it,
but preceding each place by about 1 minute of time are two objects that fit
Herschel's descriptions and declinations. Dreyer mentions this in his 1912
edition of WH's complete papers, and corrects the position of NGC 6079 in the
IC2 notes, curiously leaving NGC 6071 unannotated.
Dreyer also notes in his edition of WH's complete papers that if another star
in the sweep (G.2091 = SAO 016305) is used instead of 13 UMi as the
comparison, then the positions agree "well" with Bigourdan. Well ....
Bigourdan's places are excellent, but Herschel's positions are still five
arcmin away, and the large RA error in the NGC is traded for a large error in
declination. (There is, by the way, a 10 second error in Bigourdan's listed
RA for his comparison star for NGC 6071, perhaps a typo.)
In any event, Herschel's relative position between the two galaxies is
accurate as are his descriptions, so there is no uncertainty about the
identifications once the systematic errors are removed.
However, the poor NGC position for NGC 6079 led Swift to believe that it was a
previously unknown nebula when he ran across it in August of 1888. He did in
fact find a "new" object nearby, IC 1201, but incorrectly refers to it as the
"north-following of 2" when it is actually south, as his surprisingly good
position makes clear. The "south-preceding of 2" (which is actually north;
again, his position is good), NGC 6079 = IC 1200 is otherwise well-described
by him, including a "star 12th mag pretty close south." (His description of
IC 1201 is similarly unambiguous: "double star near points to it." All three
stars are in GSC.)
Finally, Dreyer suggests that IC 1200 might be the same object as Bigourdan
207. This, however, is IC 1204 (which see), a galaxy north-preceding NGC 6091
by a few arcmin. Bigourdan's positions for both of these are also spot on.
Steve's Notes
=====
NGC 6071
17.5" (3/28/87): faint, small, round, weak concentration. Forms a pair with CGCG 338-039 4' SW. Located 13' SE of NGC 6071. A bright unequal double star 0··143 = 6.7/9.3 at 47" lies 17' SE. This galaxy was identified as NGC 6071 by Harold Corwin, but is not identified as NGC 6071 in any other catalogue except NED. (R)NGC 6071 = UGC 10157 lies 13' NW.
17.5" (4/18/87): faint, small, round, brighter core.