Girish Mahajan (Editor)

SN 2004dj

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Other designations
  
SN 2004dj

Spectral class
  
II-P

Declination
  
+65° 35′ 57.84″

Constellation
  
Camelopardalis

Host galaxy
  
NGC 2403

Event type
  
Supernova

Right ascension
  
07 37 17.044

Epoch
  
J2000.0

Discovery date
  
31 July 2004

SN 2004dj httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Similar
  
NGC 2403, SN 2005cs, CS Camelopardalis, Beta Camelopardalis

Ngc 2403 sn 2004dj


SN 2004dj was the brightest supernova since SN 1987A at the time of its discovery.

This Type II-P supernova was discovered by Koichi Itagaki, a Japanese astronomer on July 31, 2004. At the time of its discovery, its apparent brightness was 11.2 visual magnitude; the discovery occurred after the supernova had reached its peak magnitude. The supernova's progenitor is a star in a young, compact star cluster in the galaxy NGC 2403, in Camelopardalis. The cluster had been cataloged as the 96th object in a list of luminous stars and clusters by Allan Sandage in 1984; the progenitor is therefore commonly referred to as Sandage 96. This cluster is easily visible in a Kitt Peak National Observatory image and appears starlike.

References

SN 2004dj Wikipedia