NGC 5719
Galaxy NGC 5719 |
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The barred spiral galaxy NGC 5719 and the nearby, interacting galaxy NGC 5713, recorded with the 81 cm reflector telescope at the Mount Lemmon Observatory . | |
AladinLite | |
Constellation | Virgin |
Position equinox : J2000.0 , epoch : J2000.0 |
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Right ascension | 14 h 40 m 56.3 s |
declination | -00 ° 19 ′ 06 ″ |
Appearance | |
Morphological type | SAB (s) from pec / NLAGN |
Brightness (visual) | 12.6 mag |
Brightness (B-band) | 13.4 mag |
Angular expansion | 3.2 ′ × 1.2 ′ |
Position angle | 107 ° |
Surface brightness | 13.9 mag / arcmin² |
Physical data | |
Affiliation | LGG 386 |
Redshift | 0.005781 ± 0.000010 |
Radial velocity | (1733 ± 3) km / s |
Stroke distance v rad / H 0 |
(77 ± 6) · 10 6 ly (23.6 ± 1.7) Mpc |
history | |
discovery | Wilhelm Herschel |
Discovery date | April 11, 1787 |
Catalog names | |
NGC 5719 • UGC 9462 • PGC 52455 • CGCG 019-079 • MCG + 00-37-24 • IRAS 14383-0006 • GC 3971 • H II 682 • h 1863 • LDCE 1076 NED022 |
NGC 5719 = NGC 5658 is a 12.6 mag bar -spiral-shaped Low Surface Brightness Galaxy of the Hubble type SBab / pec in the constellation Virgo , which is about 77 million light years away from the Milky Way .
It was discovered on April 11, 1787 by Wilhelm Herschel with an 18.7-inch reflector telescope, who described it as "pB, cS, lE". NGC 5658 goes back to the observation of George Bond on May 9, 1853, who mistakenly assumed the object (star) to be a galaxy. In 2015, Wolfgang Steinicke used Bond's notes to demonstrate that although he had observed NGC 5713 , he made a serious mistake in specifying the position.