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M 1

from The 110 Messier objects

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2015

Ronald Stoyan
Affiliation:
Interstellarum magazine
Stefan Binnewies
Affiliation:
Amateur astrophotographer
Susanne Friedrich
Affiliation:
Max-Planck-Institut für extraterrestrische Physik, Garching, Germany
Klaus-Peter Schroeder
Affiliation:
Universidad de Guanajuato, Mexico
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Summary

The Crab Nebula

Degree of difficulty 3 (of 5)

Minimum aperture 50mm

Designation NGC 1952

Type Galactic nebula

Class Supernova remnant

Distance 6200 ly (1999) 5250 ly (proper motion, 1993)

Size 10 ly

Constellation Taurus

R.A. 5h 34.5min

Decl. +22° 1′

Magnitude 8.4

Surface brightness 20mag/arcsec2

Apparent diameter 6′×4′

Discoverer Bevis, 1731

History On the 4th of July 1054 or maybe even earlier, in April or May that year, a new bright star near the Sun was observed in the constellation of Taurus by witnesses in Italy, Armenia, Iraq, China, Japan, and North America. The unusual object appeared with a magnitude between –4 and –7.5 and was visible to the naked eye, even in the daytime sky. Apparently, maximum brightness coincided with the solar conjunction. Chinese astronomers observed the star in daylight until the 27th of July 1054, and they were able to see it in the night sky until the 17th of April 1056, before it faded from naked-eye visibility. In Europe, sightings of the supernova were probably censored, since the catholic church saw this celestial event as a bad omen in connection with the split from the orthodox church in the same year.

In 1731, the English physician and self-taught astronomer John Bevis, without any knowledge of the related historic observations, discovered a nebula at the position of the supernova. Independently, Charles Messier found the nebula on the 28th of August 1758, while following a comet for the first time. In fact, at first he took M 1 for the comet. Messier wrote: “Nebula, contains no star; it is a whitish light, elongated in the shape of a candle's light.” Only later did Messier learn of Bevis' observation and recognized the Englishman's priority on the discovery.

William Herschel described the object as “very bright, of irregular figure, full 5' in longest direction,” and he speculated that “it consists of stars.” His son John described M 1 as a “fine object, very large, extended, very gradually brightening a little toward the middle, mottled, 4' long, 3' broad.”

Type
Chapter
Information
Atlas of the Messier Objects
Highlights of the Deep Sky
, pp. 71 - 75
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2008

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