
NGC 2403
- Distance
- 8 Mly
- Morphology
- spiral
- Constellation
- Camelopardalis
- Right Asc.
- 114.215°
- Declination
- 65.602°
- Catalog
- NGC
About NGC 2403
NGC 2403 is a spiral galaxy located approximately 8 million light-years from Earth in the constellation Camelopardalis. Its coordinates in the sky are right ascension 114.215° and declination 65.602°, and it is catalogued in the New General Catalogue (NGC).
The light reaching Earth from NGC 2403 today left the galaxy roughly 8 million years ago. What you see in telescope imagery is a snapshot of the galaxy as it appeared before most of Earth’s mammalian history.
Through the Galactic Registry, you can symbolically dedicate NGC 2403 in a name, memory, or message of your choosing. Your dedication is filed permanently in our public registry and printed on an archival 12″×18″ cotton-stock certificate, shipped worldwide. This is not an official IAU renaming — only the International Astronomical Union can officially name celestial bodies — but it is a permanent symbolic act tied to a galaxy that demonstrably exists, can be pointed at from any observatory on Earth, and has been imaged by NASA, ESA, or a ground-based telescope.

