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USNO-A2.0 — US Naval Observatory, A2.0 catalogue; USNO-B1.0 — US Naval Observatory, B1.0 catalogue; uvby98 — uvbyβ photoelectric photometric catalogue, ...
[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 ...
Most of the observations have been made at the Las Campanas Observatory in Chile. Cooperating institutions include Princeton University and the Carnegie Institution. The project is now in its fourth phase. The first phase, OGLE-I (1992–1995), used the 1.0-metre (3 ft 3 in) Swope telescope and a single-chip CCD sensor.
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 ...
The RCW Catalogue (from Rodgers, Campbell & Whiteoak) is an astronomical catalogue of Hα-emission regions in the southern Milky Way, described in (Rodgers et al. 1960). It contains 182 objects, including many of the earlier Gum catalogue (84 items) objects.
Cape Photographic Catalogue; Carte du Ciel; Catalog of 5,268 Standard Stars Based on the Normal System N30; Catalog of Components of Double and Multiple Stars; Catalog of Nearby Habitable Systems; Catalog of Stellar Identifications; Catalogue of rotational velocities of the stars; Catalogue of Spectroscopic Binary Orbits; Catalogues of ...
The Abell Catalog of Planetary Nebulae was created in 1966 by George O. Abell and was composed of 86 entries thought to be planetary nebulae. The objects were collected from discoveries, about half by Albert George Wilson and the rest by Abell, Robert George Harrington , and Rudolph Minkowski .
The standard format used to refer to Abell clusters is: Abell X, where X = 1 to 4076.E.g. Abell 1656. Alternative formats include: ABCG 1656; AC 1656; ACO 1656; A 1656, and A1656. Abell himself preferred the latter, but in recent years ACO 1656 has become the preferred format among professional astronomers and is the one recommended by the Centre de Données astronomiques de Strasbourg