Discovered by Pierre Méchain in 1781.
Messier 104 (M104, NGC 4594) is numerically the first object of the catalog
which was not included in Messier's originally published catalog. However, Charles
Messier added it by hand to his personal copy on May 11, 1781, and described it
as a "very faint nebula." It was Camille Flammarion who found that
its position coincided with Herschel's H I.43, which is the Sombrero Galaxy
(NGC 4594), and added it to the official Messier list in 1921. This object is
also mentioned by Pierre Méchain as his discovery in his letter of May 6, 1783.
William Herschel found this object independently on May 9, 1784.
This brilliant galaxy was named the Sombrero Galaxy because of its
appearance. According to de Vaucouleurs, we view it from just 6 degrees south
of its equatorial plane, which is outlined by a rather thick dark rim of
obscuring dust. This dust lane was probably the first discovered, by William
Herschel in his great reflector.
This galaxy is of type Sa-Sb, with both a big bright core, and as one can
see in shorter exposures, also well-defined spiral arms. It also has an
unusually pronounced bulge with an extended and richly populated globular
cluster system - several hundred can be counted in long exposures from big
telescopes.Recent very deep photographs from the Anglo-Australian Observatory show that
this galaxy has a very extended faint halo.
This galaxy was the first one with a large redshift found, by Vesto M.
Slipher at Lowell Observatory in 1912. Its redshift corresponds to a recession
velocity of about 1,000 km/sec (it is caused by the Hubble effect, i.e. the
cosmic expansion). This was too fast for the Sombrero to be an object in our
Milky Way galaxy. Slipher also detected the galaxy's (then the nebula's)
rotation.
M104 is the dominating member of a small group of
galaxies, the M104 group or NGC 4594 group of galaxies.
