NGC 101
spiral galaxy in the constellation Sculptor
Press Enter · cited answer in seconds
0 sources
NGC 101
Summary
NGC 101 is a barred spiral galaxy[1]. It has Wikipedia articles in 38 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- NGC 101 is credited with the discovery of John Frederick William Herschel[3].
- NGC 101's image is recorded as NGC 101 ESO.jpg[4].
- NGC 101's instance of is recorded as barred spiral galaxy[5].
- NGC 101's constellation is recorded as Sculptor[6].
- NGC 101's galaxy morphological type is recorded as Sc[7].
- NGC 101's Commons category is recorded as NGC 101[8].
- NGC 101's catalog code is recorded as NGC 101[9].
- NGC 101's catalog code is recorded as ESO 350-14[10].
- NGC 101's catalog code is recorded as IRAS 00214-3248[11].
- NGC 101's catalog code is recorded as 2MASX J00235461-3232103[12].
- NGC 101's catalog code is recorded as IRAS F00214-3248[13].
- NGC 101's catalog code is recorded as MCG-05-02-003[14].
- NGC 101's catalog code is recorded as PGC 1518[15].
- NGC 101's catalog code is recorded as GSC 06993-00036[16].
- NGC 101's catalog code is recorded as ESO-LV 350-0140[17].
- NGC 101's catalog code is recorded as 6dFGS gJ002354.6-323210[18].
- NGC 101's catalog code is recorded as HIPASS J0024-32[19].
- NGC 101's catalog code is recorded as SGC 002125-3248.8[20].
- NGC 101's catalog code is recorded as LEDA 1518[21].
- NGC 101's catalog code is recorded as APMBGC 350+030-123[22].
- NGC 101's time of discovery or invention is recorded as +1834-09-25T00:00:00Z[23].
- NGC 101's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/0nbdfyj[24].
- NGC 101's topic's main category is recorded as Category:NGC 101[25].
- NGC 101's redshift is recorded as {'unit': '1', 'amount': '+0.011321'}[26].
- NGC 101's redshift is recorded as {'unit': '1', 'amount': '+0.011341'}[27].
Body
Works and Contributions
NGC 101 is credited with the discovery of John Frederick William Herschel[3].
Why It Matters
NGC 101 has Wikipedia articles in 38 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]