Discovered by Giovanni Batista Hodierna before 1654.
Independently rediscovered by Charles Messier on August 25, 1764.
[Mem. Acad. for 1771, p. 448-449 (first Messier catalog)]
In the same night of [August] 25 to 26, [1764,] I have determined the
position of a cluster of small stars between the head of the Medusa & the
left foot of Andromedaalmost on the parallel of the star Gamma of that letter
constellation. With an ordinary [non-achromatic] refractor of 3 feet [FL],
one distinguishes these stars; the cluster may have 15 minutes in extension.
I have determined its position with regard to the star Beta in the head of
the Medusa [Beta Persei, Algol]; its right ascension has been concluded at
36d 51' 37", & its declination as 41d 39' 32" north.
[p. 457]
1764.Aug.25. RA: 36.51.37, Dec: 41.39.32.B, Diam: 0.15.
Cluster of small stars between the head of the Medusa & the left foot of
Andromeda, at little distance to the parallel of the star Gamma of the latter
constellation.
Sweep 190 (October 29, 1828)
RA 2h 31m 8.7s, NPD 47d 57m 50s (1830.0)
Poor; coarse; very badly seen through haze.
Last Modification: May 22, 2005