NGC 7033 explained
NGC 7033 |
Epoch: | J2000 |
Type: | S0/a [1] |
Z: | 0.030374 |
H Radial V: | 9,106 km/s |
Appmag V: | 15.10 |
Size V: | 0.7 x 0.4 |
Constellation Name: | Pegasus |
Names: | CGCG 426-6, KCPG 554A, MCG 2-54-2, NPM1G +14.0507, PGC 66228 |
NGC 7033 is a lenticular galaxy located about 390 million light-years away in the constellation of Pegasus.[2] [3] It is part of a pair of galaxies that contains the nearby galaxy NGC 7034.[4] NGC 7033 was discovered by astronomer Albert Marth on September 17, 1863.[5]
On July 2, 2016 a Type Ia supernova designated as SN 2016cyt was discovered in NGC 7033.[6] [7] It had a maximum apparent magnitude of 18.0.
See also
Notes and References
- Web site: NASA/IPAC Extragalactic Database . Results for NGC 7033 . 2017-06-21 .
- Web site: Galaxy NGC 7033 - Galaxy in Pegasus Constellation · Deep Sky Objects Browser. Rojas. Sebastián García. DSO Browser. en. 2017-06-21. 2017-09-27. https://web.archive.org/web/20170927114513/https://dso-browser.com/deep-sky/8220/ngc-7033/galaxy. dead.
- Web site: Your NED Search Results. ned.ipac.caltech.edu. 2017-06-21.
- Web site: NGC 7033. simbad.u-strasbg.fr. 2017-06-21.
- Web site: New General Catalog Objects: NGC 7000 – 7049. cseligman.com. en-US. 2017-04-15.
- Web site: SN 2016cyt Transient Name Server. wis-tns.weizmann.ac.il. 2017-06-30.
- Web site: Bright Supernova pages - Sorted by Host name 2016. rochesterastronomy.org. 2017-06-30.