Messier 75
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Globular cluster Messier 75  | 
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| Photo from the Hubble Space Telescope | |
| AladinLite | |
| Constellation | Sagittarius | 
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Position  equinox : J2000.0 , epoch : J2000.0  | 
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| Right ascension | 20 h 06 m 04.8 s | 
| declination | −21 ° 55 ′ 20.1 ″ | 
| Appearance | |
| Concentration class | I. | 
| Brightness (visual) | 9.18 likes | 
| Brightness (B-band) | 10.03 mag | 
| Angular expansion | 6.8 ' | 
| Physical data | |
| Affiliation | Milky Way | 
| Redshift | −0.000631 ± 0.000012 | 
| Radial velocity | −198 ± 4 km / s | 
| distance | 67.5  kLj  (20.5 kpc )  | 
| diameter | 67 ly | 
| history | |
| discovery | Pierre Méchain | 
| Discovery date | August 27, 1780 | 
| Catalog names | |
| M 75 • NGC 6864 • C 2003-220 • GCl 116 • ESO 595-SC013 • | |
Messier 75 (also referred to as NGC 6864 ) is a 9.2 mag bright globular cluster with an angular extent of 6.8 'in the constellation Sagittarius . Viewed from Earth, it lies on the other side of our Milky Way and, at a distance of 67,500 light years, is one of the most distant galactic globular clusters and the most distant in the Messier catalog.
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b c d SIMBAD
 - ↑ Harlow Shapley, Helen B. Sawyer: A Classification of Globular Clusters . In: Harvard College Observatory Bulletin . tape 849 , 1927, pp. 11-14 , bibcode : 1927BHarO.849 ... 11S .
 - ↑ a b M75 at SEDS
 - ↑ Seligman
 
