IC 1296 explained

IC 1296
Names:IC 1296, UGC 11374,PGC 62532, CGCG 201-040, MCG +06-41-022, 2MASX J18531883+3303596, 2MASS J18531884+3303599
Sbrightness:23.63 mag/arcsec^2
Dec:+33° 03’ 59”
Epoch:J2000
Constellation Name:Lyra
Z:0.017075
H Radial V:5,119 km/s
Size:120,000 ly
Size V:1.10' x 0.9'
Type:SBbc
Dist Ly:238 Mly (72.97 Mpc)

IC 1296 is an extremely faint barred spiral galaxy of Hubble-type SBbc in the constellation Lyra in the northern sky. It is estimated to be 238 million light-years from the Milky Way and about 120,000 light-years in diameter.[1]

IC 1296 is only 4 arc minutes away from the well-known Ring Nebula in the night sky.[2] Planetary nebulae and galaxies are rarely observed together because planetary nebulae are galactic objects and are concentrated toward our galactic center, where extragalactic objects - such as distant galaxies - are rarely observed due to absorption by gas and dust.

The astronomical object was discovered on October 2, 1893, by Edward Emerson Barnard. In August 2013, supernova SN2013ev was discovered in the southern spiral arm of IC 1296.[3]

See also

External links

References

  1. Web site: Your NED Search Results . 2024-06-06 . ned.ipac.caltech.edu.
  2. Web site: Ring Nebula (Messier 57) Deep⋆Sky Corner . 2024-06-06 . www.deepskycorner.ch.
  3. Web site: Revised IC Data for IC 1296 . 2024-06-06 . spider.seds.org.