NGC 5907 has long been considered a prototypical example of a warped spiral in relative isolation. In 2006, an international team of astronomers announced the presence of an extended tidal stream surrounding the galaxy that challenges this picture and suggests the gravitational perturbations induced by the stream progenitor may be the cause for the warp.
The existence of part of these tidal streams has been recently challenged by some deeper surveys.
One supernova has been observed in NGC 5907: SN 1940A (type unknown, mag 14.3).[4][5]
The edge-on galaxy is seen in the constellation Draco, near the star iota Draconis. It is seen in the sky near to the much more distant galaxy NGC 5965.
NGC 5907 is also known as NGC 5906.[7][8] This second NGC number refers to a fainter part of the galaxy[7] lying west of the dust lane[8] that was recorded by astronomer and physicist George Johnstone Stoney on April 13, 1850.[7]
^Liu, M. C.; Marleau, F. R.; Graham, J. R.; Charlot, S.; Sackett, P.; Zepf, S. E. (December 1998). "Weighing the Stellar Content of NGC 5907's Dark Matter Halo". Bulletin of the American Astronomical Society. 30: 1258. Bibcode:1998AAS...193.0807L.
^"List of Supernovae". Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (IAU). Retrieved 2010-07-11.