Dunlop made several noteworthy discoveries in the Southern Hemisphere sky and in 1828 published
A Catalogue of Nebulae and Clusters of Stars in the Southern Hemisphere observed in New South Wales, which contains 629 objects. A little more than half the objects he discovered proved to be real, most being small nebulous objects being probably artificially created from the handmade reflecting telescope he had constructed himself. He found many new
open star clusters,
globular clusters,
bright nebulae and
planetary nebulae, most previously unknown to visual observers. His most famous discovery is likely the radio galaxy
NGC 5128 or
Centaurus A, a well-known
starburst galaxy in the
constellation of
Centaurus. Dunlop's other major observational work was of 256 southern
double stars or "pairs" below the
declination of about 30° South. These were listed in
Approximate Places of Double Stars in the Southern Hemisphere, observed at Paramatta in New South Wales, published in 1829. Many of these pairs were actual new discoveries, though the most northerly of them had been earlier discoveries made by other observers. These double star observations were all made roughly between December 1827 and December 1828, being observed through his homemade 9-foot 23 cm (9-inch)
speculum Newtonian reflector, or by measuring the separated distances and position angles of selected double stars using the small equatorial mounted
refracting telescope. Most of these pairs have proved to be uninteresting to astronomers, and many of the double stars selected were too wide for the indication of orbital motion as
binary stars. It seems these observations were made when the atmospheric conditions were quite unsuitable for looking at
deep sky objects, either being made under unsteady
astronomical seeing or when the sky was illuminated by the bright moon.
John Herschel immediately on arrival in South Africa in 1834 and 1835 re-observed all of the James Dunlop's double stars, but had troubles identifying them or finding significant differences in the measured positions of the stars. He first began with
Alpha Crucis /
Acrux, the brightest star in the constellation of
Crux, also commonly known as the
Southern Cross, then systematically searched for all the others. Herschel also was first to designate all the Dunlop double stars to begin with the Greek letter "Δ", which persists in many amateur observational references. Hence, bright southern doubles like
p Eridani is known as Δ5,
Gamma Crucis / Gacrux is Δ124, etc. Modern double star observers have since discarded this designation and prefer the observer abbreviation "DUN", as first adopted in the
Washington Double Star Catalog (WDS) as maintained by the
US Naval Observatory in Washington, D.C. Hence, p Eridani is DUN 5, Gamma Crucis /
Gacrux is DUN 124, etc. ==Death==