
Table of all 110 Messier
objects.
The
Messier objects are a set of astronomical objects first listed by
French
astronomer Charles Messier in his "Catalogue des
Nébuleuses et des Amas d'Étoiles" ("Catalogue of Nebulae and Star
Clusters") included in the Connaissance des Temps for
1774 (published in 1771). The original
motivation of the catalogue was that Messier was a
comet hunter, and was frustrated by objects which
resembled but were not comets. He therefore compiled a
list of these objects, in
collaboration with his assistant
Pierre Méchain.
The first edition covered 45 objects numbered
M1 to
M45. The total list published by
Messier finally contained 103 objects, but the list "got an
independent life" by successive additions by other astronomers,
motivating the additions by side notes in Messier’s and Mechain’s
texts indicating that either of them knew of the objects. The first
such addition came from
Camille
Flammarion in 1921, who added
Messier
104 after finding Messier’s side note in his 1781 edition
exemplar of the catalogue.
M105 to
M107 were added by
Helen Sawyer Hogg in 1947,
M108 and
M109 by
Owen Gingerich in 1960, and
M110 by
Kenneth
Glyn Jones.
M102 was observed by
Méchain, who communicated his notes to Messier; later, it was
admitted by Méchain himself that this object does not exist, and it
was simply a re-observation of M101. Some sources mention the
galaxy
NGC 5866 as an identification for
M102, but its description does not fit with Méchain's notes.
Messier's final catalogue was included in the
Connaissance des
Temps for 1784 (published in 1781).Charles Messier, 1781.
Catalogue des Nébuleuses & des amas d'Étoiles. Connoissance des
Temps for 1784 (published 1781), pp. 227-267 [Bibcode:
1781CdT..1784..227M]
These objects are still known by their
Messier
number from this list.
Because Messier lived and did his astronomical work in France in
the Northern Hemisphere, the list he compiled contains only objects
from the north
celestial pole to a
celestial latitude of about –35.7°. Many impressive Southern
objects, such as the Large and Small
Magellanic Clouds are excluded from the
list.
All of the Messier objects are visible with binoculars or small
telescopes (under favorable conditions); therefore they are popular
viewing objects for amateur astronomers. In early spring,
astronomers sometimes gather for "
Messier marathons", when all of the objects
can be viewed over a single night.
A summary of the astrophysics of each Messier object can be found
in the
Concise Catalog of Deep-sky Objects.
Links to articles
See also
References
- The Guinness Book of Astronomy, Patrick Moore and Guinness Superlatives
Ltd 1979, ISBN 09-00-42476-1
External links
- * Charles Messier
- * Charles Messier's Catalog of Nebulae and Star
Clusters