MISCLASSIFIED
MILKY WAY
|
PN SwSt 1 | IRAS 18129-3053 | GSC2.4.2 S9SM000588 | AAVSO 000-BDB-793 |
SIMBAD PN SwSt 1 | Pan-STARRS 70952740511577611 | SAO - | VSX 235673 |
GAIA DR3 4049331244394134912 | SkyMapper - | WRAY 16-397 | GCVS - |
2MASS J18161228-3052078 | HIP 89535 | Hen - | BD - |
WISE J181612.28-305207.9 | TYC - | ESO - | HD - |
Bidelman (1954) | - | Allen (1984) | - | Belzcyński et al. (2001) | - |
Gaposchkin (1957) | - | Kenyon (1986) | - | Akras et al. (2019) | - |
Boyarchuk (1969) | - | Vaidis (1988, 1991) | - |
Right ascension (°) | 274.0511Ref | Parallax (mas) | 0.343±0.110Ref | Reddening E(B-V) (mag) | 0.24±0.0Ref, Note |
Declination (°) | -30.8689Ref | Distance (kpc) | 3.97Ref, Note, 3.40Ref, Note | ||
Galactic longitude (°) | 1.5906Ref | Proper motion in α (mas/yr) | -6.24±0.13Ref | ||
Galactic latitude (°) | -6.7176Ref | Proper motion in δ (mas/yr) | -1.72±0.10Ref |
SIMBAD (Wenger et al., 2000) redirects SS73 149 to PN SwSt 1. Initially classified as a symbiotic star by Sanduleak & Stephenson, 1973, they highlighted its close proximity to MWC 288 (= Hen 2-377 = HD 167362; Henize (1967)) and cautioned against confusion with another star. However, in present times, SIMBAD (Wenger et al., 2000) considers these two as the same star.