RD1 (0140+326 RD1) | |
---|---|
Observation data (J2000 epoch) | |
Constellation | Triangulum |
Right ascension | 01h 43m 42.8s |
Declination | +32° 54′ 00.0″ |
Redshift | 5.34[1] |
Distance | around 12.5 billion light-years (light travel distance)[2] ~26 billion light-years (present comoving distance)[2] |
Apparent magnitude (V) | 26.1 |
Other designations | |
[DS98] 6C 0140+326 RD1 |
RD1 or 0140+326 RD1 is a distant galaxy, it once held the title of most distant galaxy known.[3] RD1 was discovered in March 1998, and is at z = 5.34,[1] and was the first object found to exceed redshift 5.[4] It bested the previous recordholders, a pair of galaxies at z=4.92 lensed by the galaxy cluster CL 1358+62 (CL 1358+62 G1 & CL 1358+62 G2). It was the most distant object known to mankind for a few months in 1998, until BR1202-0725 LAE was discovered at z = 5.64.
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