Messier 11
Open Cluster M11 (NGC 6705), type 'g', in
Scutum
Wild Duck Cluster
|
Right Ascension |
18 :
51.1 (h:m) |
|
Declination |
-06 :
16 (deg:m) |
|
Distance |
6.0 (kly) |
|
Visual Brightness |
6.3 (mag)
|
|
Apparent Dimension |
14.0
(arc min) |
Discovered 1681 by Gottfried Kirch.
Messier 11 (M11, NGC 6705) is "One of the richest and most compact of the
galactic (open) clusters," to say it with Robert Burnham, Jr. M11 contains
an estimated 2900 stars, about 500 of which are brighter than mag 14. An
observer at the center of M11 would see several hundred first magnitude
stars! So rich and dense, it was classified by Trumpler as II,2,r (some
newer classifications have it as I,2,r).
The apparent diameter is given with discordant values;
E.E. Barnard estimated 35', while the Sky Catalog 2000 gives 14'.
The age of the Wild Duck cluster has been estimated to amount 220 million
years, as its brightest and hottest main sequence stars are of spectral type
B8 (according to the Sky Atlas 2000), but also double that value (Burnham
gives 500 million years). The higher value is supported by the fact that
this cluster also contains many yellow and red giants of absolute magnitude
around -1.0.
G. Meynet's Geneva Team has recently calculated its age at 250 million
years. It is receding at 22 km/sec.
M11 was discovered by the German astronomer
Gottfried Kirch of the Berlin observatory in 1681. It was apparently
first resolved into stars by
William Derham about 1733.
Charles Messier included it in
his catalog on May 30, 1764.
JACANA ASTRONOMY SITE
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SOLAR SYSTEM
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STARS
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GALAXIES
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NEBULAE
SUPERNOVAE |
CLUSTERS |
DOUBLE STARS
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COMETS
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ASTEROIDS
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DUST CLOUDS|
ILLUSTRATED MESSIER LIST