The first known observation of the galaxy was during the creation of the
Morphological Catalogue of Galaxies by
Boris Vorontsov-Velyaminov and V.P. Harkipova in 1974, with the catalogue entry
MCG-05-33-002. The galaxy was also observed around this time by the
ESO Sky Survey Atlas, a large-scale survey of the Southern Sky conducted using the 1-metre
Schmidt telescope in
La Silla Observatory. In 1982, the ESO/Uppsala Catalogue then lists the galaxy in its current designation form – ESO 383-G 076, indicating both its field number (field 383 out of the 606 in the survey), classification (G, for "Galaxy"), and its numerical identifier in its field. The galaxy, at this point, was nothing more than just an obscure catalogue entry. O.G. Richter in 1984 then observed the galaxy during a redshift survey of the ESO/SRC Survey Fields 444 and 445 of the Klemola 27 group (now known as the
IC 4329 galaxy group). The group consists of prominent galaxies such as the namesake IC 4329 – another massive supergiant elliptical that is also an extreme
Seyfert galaxy, and
NGC 5291 – a disturbed
interacting galaxy pair. ESO 383-76 would be additionally recorded in many subsequent galaxy surveys, such as the survey of the
Hydra–Centaurus Supercluster by L.N. da Costa
et al in 1986, and moreover a photometric catalogue by Lauberts and Valentijn in 1989 that made the first angular diameter measurements of the galaxy. This includes the D25 and D25.5 B-band isophotes, as well as the 50% total light emission (the
half-light radius) and variations of it (60%, 70%, and 90%). A.P. Fairall
et al would further incorporate the galaxy in their wide-scale survey of the Hydra-Centaurus Supercluster in 1989. It was additionally included in many other surveys due to its location in the sky in the rich Centaurus region and the wide-scale research of extragalactic objects near the Milky Way plane by the last decade of the 20th century. The galaxy has additionally been catalogued by
Alan Dressler in 1991 during an analysis of velocities of 1,314 galaxies near the
Milky Way galactic plane region – allowing to pinpoint the location and verify the existence of the
Great Attractor. == Description ==