
NGC 2903 · galaxy
NGC 2903
NGC 2903 is an isolated barred spiral galaxy in the equatorial constellation of Leo, positioned about 1.5° due south of Lambda Leonis.
Identity & coordinates
Identification
- Primary designation
- NGC 2903
- All designations
- NGC 2903
- Object type
- Galaxy
- Constellation
- Leo
- Best viewing
- Spring
Coordinates & physical
- Right ascension (J2000)
- 09h 32m 10s
- Declination (J2000)
- +21° 30' 02"
- Apparent magnitude (V)
- —
- Distance
- —
- Redshift (z)
- 0.001834
Visibility tonight
The science
NGC 2903 is an isolated barred spiral galaxy in the equatorial constellation of Leo, positioned about 1.5° due south of Lambda Leonis. It was discovered by German-born astronomer William Herschel, who cataloged it on November 16, 1784. He mistook it as a double nebula, as did subsequent observers, and it wasn't until the nineteenth century that the Third Earl of Rosse resolved into a spiral form. J. L. E. Dreyer assigned it the identifiers 2903 and 2905 in his New General Catalogue; NGC 2905 now designates a luminous knot in the northeastern spiral arm.
Summary adapted from Wikipedia · CC-BY-SA-4.0
References
- SIMBAD Not resolved
- NED Fetched May 8, 2026 View in NED ↗
- Wikipedia Fetched May 8, 2026 Read full article ↗
Wikipedia title resolved via id — the catalog designation was a Wikipedia article title directly.
1 merge conflict resolved
- coordinates: SIMBAD missing → NED used



