Information
provided by seds.orgDiscovered by Charles Messier in 1764.
The Trifid Nebula Messier 20 (M20, NGC 6514) in Sagittarius is a remarkable
and beautiful object as it consists of both a conspicuous emission nebula and a
remarkable reflection nebula component.
Charles Messier discovered this object on June 5, 1764, and described it as
a cluster of stars of 8th to 9th magnitude, enveloped in nebulosity, where the
remark on nebulosity follows only after the description of nearby M21, and
includes that object.
The Trifid Nebula M20 is famous for its three-lobed appearance. This may
have caused William Herschel, who normally carefully avoided to number Messier's
objects in his catalog, to assign four different numbers to parts of this
nebula: H IV.41 (cataloged May 26, 1786) and H V.10, H V.11, H V.12 (dated July
12, 1784). That he numbered this object at all may have its reason in the fact
that Messier merely described it as 'Cluster of Stars.' The name 'Trifid' was
first used by John Herschel to describe this nebula; this astronomer assigned
only one catalog entry to the whole object (h 1991, h 3718, GC 4355) which
became J.L.E. Dreyer's NGC 6514.
The dark nebula, which is the reason for the Trifid's appearance, was cataloged
by Barnard as Barnard 85 (B 85).
