NGC 3013
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NGC 3013
Summary
NGC 3013 is a low-ionization nuclear emission-line region[1]. It has Wikipedia articles in 10 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- NGC 3013 is credited with the discovery of Lawrence Parsons, 4th Earl of Rosse[3].
- NGC 3013's image is recorded as NGC 3013 SDSS.jpg[4].
- NGC 3013's instance of is recorded as low-ionization nuclear emission-line region[5].
- NGC 3013's instance of is recorded as spiral galaxy[6].
- NGC 3013's constellation is recorded as Leo Minor[7].
- NGC 3013's galaxy morphological type is recorded as S[8].
- NGC 3013's galaxy morphological type is recorded as SBabr[9].
- NGC 3013's Commons category is recorded as NGC 3013[10].
- NGC 3013's catalog code is recorded as NGC 3013[11].
- NGC 3013's catalog code is recorded as MCG+06-22-018[12].
- NGC 3013's catalog code is recorded as PGC 28300[13].
- NGC 3013's catalog code is recorded as 2MASX J09500934+3334094[14].
- NGC 3013's catalog code is recorded as Z 182-24[15].
- NGC 3013's catalog code is recorded as Z 0947.1+3348[16].
- NGC 3013's catalog code is recorded as SDSS J095009.35+333409.5[17].
- NGC 3013's catalog code is recorded as SDSS J095009.36+333409.5[18].
- NGC 3013's catalog code is recorded as GASS 33469[19].
- NGC 3013's catalog code is recorded as NPM1G +33.0174[20].
- NGC 3013's catalog code is recorded as LEDA 28300[21].
- NGC 3013's catalog code is recorded as SDSS J095009.36+333409.6[22].
- NGC 3013's catalog code is recorded as Gaia DR2 793702092217352448[23].
- NGC 3013's time of discovery or invention is recorded as +1874-03-18T00:00:00Z[24].
- NGC 3013's redshift is recorded as {'amount': '+0.02701'}[25].
- NGC 3013's apparent magnitude is recorded as {'amount': '+15.2'}[26].
- NGC 3013's apparent magnitude is recorded as {'amount': '+15.6'}[27].
Body
Works and Contributions
NGC 3013 is credited with the discovery of Lawrence Parsons, 4th Earl of Rosse[3].
Why It Matters
NGC 3013 has Wikipedia articles in 10 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]