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ESO Science Data Archive. The European Southern Observatory Catalog is an astronomical catalog that contains a log of observations performed with the ESO telescopes at La Silla and Paranal observatories, including the APEX submillimeter telescope on Llano de Chajnantor, as well as the UKIDSS/WFCAM data obtained at the UK Infrared Telescope facility in Hawaii.
EPIC — Ecliptic Plane Input Catalog; Escorial — (open star clusters) ESO — European Southern Observatory Catalog, ESO/Uppsala catalog; Esp — T. E. H. Espin (double stars) Es/Birm — Espin/Birmingham (catalogue of red stars)
ESO Science Archive has been providing access to data from astronomical catalogues since 1988. [1] An astronomical catalogue is a list or tabulation of astronomical objects, typically grouped together because they share a common type, morphology, origin, means of detection, or method of discovery. The oldest and largest are star catalogues.
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... ESO objects (161 P) F. Flamsteed objects (9 C, ... Pages in category "Astronomical catalogues"
The Sharpless catalog is a list of 313 H II regions (emission nebulae) intended to be comprehensive north of declination −27°. (It does include some nebulae south of that declination as well.) (It does include some nebulae south of that declination as well.)
For the southern sky, the J-band (blue, Eastman Kodak IIIa-J) of the ESO/SERC Southern Sky Atlas (known as the SERC-J, code "S") [4] [5] [6] and the "quick" V-band (blue or V in the Johnson–Kron–Cousins system, Eastman Kodak IIa-D) SERC-J Equatorial Extension (SERC-QV, code "XV"), from the UK Schmidt Telescope at the Australian Siding ...
ESO 444- G 046, MCG −05-32-026, PGC 047202, Shapley 8-1 [1] ESO 444-46 ( Shapley 8-1 , A3558-M1 ) is a class E4 supergiant elliptical galaxy ; [ 2 ] the dominant and brightest member of the Abell 3558 galaxy cluster around 195 megaparsecs (636 million light-years ) away in the constellation Centaurus .
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 .