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LAMOST — Large Sky Area Multi-Object Fibre Spectroscopic Telescope (Guo Shoujing Telescope) ... USNO-A2.0 — US Naval Observatory, A2.0 catalogue; USNO-B1.0 — US ...
c. 350 BC — Shi Shen's star catalog has almost 800 entries; c. 300 BC — star catalog of Timocharis of Alexandria; c. 134 BC — Hipparchus makes a detailed star map; c. 150 — Ptolemy completes his Almagest, which contains a catalog of stars, observations of planetary motions, and treatises on geometry and cosmology
[10] [11] [12] Red band sources for the southern sky include the short red (SR) plates of the SERC I/SR Survey and Atlas of the Milky Way and Magellanic Clouds (referred to as AAO-SR in DSS2), [13] the Equatorial Red (SERC-ER), [5] and the F-band Second Epoch Survey (referred to as AAO-SES in DSS2, AAO-R in the original literature), [14] all ...
Miller Observatory: 1976 Maiden, North Carolina, US Mills Observatory: 1938 Dundee, Scotland, UK Mind's Eye Observatory IAU W42: 2018 Sebastian, Florida, US MMT Observatory: 1979 Mount Hopkins, Arizona, US Modine-Benstead Observatory: 1963 Union Grove, Wisconsin, US Modra Observatory: 1988 Modra, Slovakia Mohr Observatory (demolished) 1765–1780
Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap. ... Pages in category "Astronomical observatories in North Carolina" ... Three College Observatory; W.
The Sydney 'Star Camera' used in the Carte du Ciel project, original publication, 1892. The Carte du Ciel (French pronunciation: [kaʁt dy sjɛl]; literally, 'Map of the Sky') and the Astrographic Catalogue (or Astrographic Chart) were two distinct but connected components of a massive international astronomical project, initiated in the late 19th century, to catalogue and map the positions of ...
Yale Observatory Zone Catalog This page was last edited on 23 April 2020, at 01:54 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 ...
This catalogue originated the usage of letters and catalogue numbers as identifiers. The capital "H" followed with the catalogue entry number represented the item. [4] In 1864, the CN was expanded into the General Catalogue of Nebulae and Clusters of Stars (GC) by John Herschel (William's son). [5] The GC contained 5,079 entries.