Caroline Herschel's Deep Sky Objects (original) (raw)

Besides and before assisting her brother, William Herschel, in his great Deep Sky survey starting in late 1782, Caroline Herschel herself was an avid astronomical observer, and discoverer of comets (she originally found 8 of them) and deepsky objects. William Herschel has included her discoveries in his catalog, and assigned numbers to them.

CH MH M NGC Herschel RA Dec Con Type R Discovery Date


CH 12 14 NGC 189 - 00:39.6 +61:04 Cas OC O 1783 Sep 27 (Hoskin 2005) CH 9 4 M110 NGC 205 H V.18 00:40.4 +41:41 And G E5p I 1783 Aug 27 CH 11 9 NGC 225 H VIII.78 00:43.4 +61:47 Cas OC O 1783 Sep 27 CH 10 5 NGC 253 H V.1 00:47.6 -25:17 Scl G Sc I 1783 Sep 23 CH 20 6 NGC 659 H VIII.65 01:44.2 +60:42 Cas OC O 1783 Sep 27 CH 13 11 NGC 752? H VII.32 01:57.8 +37:41 And OC I 1783 Sep 29 CH 2 1 NGC 2360 H VII.12 07:17.8 -15:37 CMa OC O 1783 Feb 26 CH 5 2 M 48 NGC 2548 H VI.22 08:13.8 -05:48 Hya OC I 1783 Mar 8 CH 8 3 NGC 6633 H VIII.72 18:27.7 +06:43 Oph OC I 1783 Jul 31 CH 16 12 NGC 6819 - 19:41.3 +40:11 Cyg OC O 1784 May 12 (Hoskin 2005) CH 7 10 NGC 6866 H VII.59 20:03.7 +44:00 Cyg OC O 1783 Jul 23 (Hoskin 2005) CH 19 8 NGC 7380 H VIII.77 22:47.0 +58:06 Cep OC+N O 1787 Aug 7 CH 14 7 NGC 7789 H VI.30 23:57.0 +56:44 Cas OC O 1783 Oct 30 [CH 21] - IC 4665 - 17:46.3 +05:43 Oph OC I 1783 Jul 31 (Hoskin 2006)

Notes

"Mystery" object, possibly discovered by Caroline Herschel:

CH 4 13 [NGC 2349] H VII.27 07:10.8 -08:36 Mon OC? O 1783 Mar 4 (Hoskin 2005: WH's mis-id)

Note:

CH 17 Near Chi Aurigae, nebulous CH 18 RA 01:40:28, Dec -13, 3..5 or more nebulous stars

Note:

[-CH 12] 14 [NGC 381] H VIII.64 01:08.3 +61:35 Cas OC - 1783 Sep 27 (Hoskin 2005: WH's mis-id) [-CH 9] 15 [NGC 891] H V.19 02:22.6 +42:21 And G Sb - 1783 Aug 27 (app. W.H.'s 1st cat; W.H. Smyth) [-CH 2] 16 [NGC 2204] H VII.13 06:15.7 -18:39 CMa OC - 1783 Feb 26 (appendix to W.H.'s 1st catalog)

Notes:

Sources:

No. 1. Feb 26, 1783. M93.

Caroline thought to have discovered a new cluster near the star 7 (Zeta) Navis (Puppis), which was probably mis-read 1 (Rho) and therefore not immediately identified with M93. [MH No. 17]

No. 2. Feb 26, 1783. H VII.12 = NGC 2360.

Caroline's first real original discovery of a deepsky object. [MH No. 1] In the appendix to his first catalog, William confused this one with H VII.13 = NGC 2204. [MH No. 16]

No. 3. Mar 4, 1783. M46.

[MH No. 18]

No. 4. Mar 4, 1783. H VII.22 = NGC 2349 ??

[MH No. 13]

No. 5. Mar 8, 1783. H VI.22 = M48 (NGC 2548).

[MH No. 2]

No. 6. Apr 6, 1783. M29.

[MH No. 19]

No. 7. Jul 23, 1783. H VII.59 = NGC 6866.

[MH No. 10]

No. 8. Jul 31, 1783. H VIII.72 = NGC 6633.

[MH No. 3]

No. 9. Aug 27, 1783. H V.18 = M110 (NGC 205).

[MH No. 4] In the appendix to his first catalog, William confused this one with H V.19 = NGC 891. Based on this entry, William Smyth attributed the latter to Caroline. [MH No. 15]

No. 10. Sep 23, 1783. H V.1 = NGC 253.

[MH No. 5]

No. 11. Sep 27, 1783. H VIII.78 = NGC 225.

[MH No. 9]

No. 12. Sep 27, 1783. NGC 189.

[MH No. 14]

No. 13. Sep 29, 1783. H VII.32 = NGC 752?

[MH No. 11]

No. 14. Oct 30, 1783. H VI.30 = NGC 7789.

[MH No. 7]

No. 15. Feb 23, 1784. Re-observation of NGC 225.

Cluster 1 1/4 deg south following Kappa Cas, viewed again March 8 and 11, according to Hoskin (2005), footnote No. 97. Missing the identity may have resulted from a misprint; On Feb 23, Caroline noted erronously that this cluster would precede, instead of follow, Kappa Cas. William Herschel probably quotes this observation as discovery when he writes "CH 1784" in his catalog, while the original discovery was her No. 11.

No. 16. May 12, 1784. NGC 6819.

[MH No. 12]

No. 17. Oct 13, 1782. "Chi Aurigae or near it is nebulous."

Not identifyable by this description.

No. 18. Dec 1, 1782. "1h 40' 28" RA & 13deg S Dec are 3. 4. 5 or more small stars which I cannot help thinking make a nebulous appearance."

Not identifyable by this description.

No. 19. Aug 7, 1787. H VIII.77 = NGC 7380.

[MH No. 8]

No. 20. Sep 27, 1783. H VIII.65 = NGC 659.

[MH No. 6]

Michael Hoskin also reports (Hoskin 2005) that Caroline had avidly observed more objects, which she identified as known nebulae or clusters. A list extracted from his article follows:

Caroline Herschel's objects include the conspicuous spiral galaxy NGC 253, and the famous ellipticalM110 (NGC 205), the second satellite of theAndromeda galaxy, M31. The other objects are all open clusters: Bright M48 (NGC 2548), four of the open clusters in Cassiopeia and one in nearby Cepheus, NGC 752 in Andromeda, one in Canis Major and two in Cygnus. There's a big gap of populated Right Ascensions between RA 8:15 and 18:25, so that all Caroline Herschel objects can be observed easily in one night on the Northern hemisphere, about Northern Fall.

Caroline Herschel was honored lately by the astronomical community by naming a Lunar Crater after her: C. Herschel (34.5N, 31.2W, 13.0 km diameter, 1935). Asteroid (281) Lucretia was named to honor Caroline Lucretia Herschel; it had been discovered on October 31, 1888 by J. Palisa in Vienna.

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Please submit any additions, corrections, or comments. Especially, one source gave the number of 14, but didn't identify them, so, if you can, please help me with the remaining single one entry.


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Christine Kronberg
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