Messier 18
Open Cluster M18 (NGC 6613), type 'd', in
Sagittarius
|
Right Ascension |
18 :
19.9 (h:m) |
|
Declination |
-17 :
08 (deg:m) |
|
Distance |
4.9 (kly) |
|
Visual Brightness |
7.5 (mag)
|
|
Apparent Dimension |
9.0
(arc min) |
Discovered by Charles Messier in 1764.
Open cluster Messier 18 (M18, NGC 6613) is best observed in small
telescopes, which show over a dozen of fairly bright stars (the Sky Catalog
2000 lists it with 20 members). It is about 0.2 degrees in diameter, thus
appears loose and poor, its Trumpler type is given as II,3,p,n by all
sources (where the "n" assigns to it some nebulosity). Its distance is about
4,900 light years, according to Kenneth Glyn Jones and Burnham, but the
sources disagree: Mallas gives 6,000, the Sky Catalog 2000 has 3,900 light
years. Adopting our value of 4,900 light years, its linear diameter should
be about 17 light years.
As the hottest stars in M18 are of spectral type B3, this cluster is
quite young; its age is estimated at 32 million years. As seen in the color
image in our collection of
more images of M18, this cluster contains bright blue as well as bright
yellow or orange stars.
M18 is situated between the Omega Nebula
M17 and the star cloud
M24. This
region around M17, M18 and M24 was photographed e.g. with the UK Schmidt
Telescope.
Open cluster M18 is one of the original discoveries of
Charles Messier, who
cataloged it on June 3, 1764.
JACANA ASTRONOMY SITE
|
SOLAR SYSTEM
|
STARS
|
GALAXIES
|
NEBULAE
SUPERNOVAE |
CLUSTERS |
DOUBLE STARS
|
COMETS
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ASTEROIDS
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DUST CLOUDS|
ILLUSTRATED MESSIER LIST