Messier 26
Open Cluster M26 (NGC 6694), type 'f', in
Scutum
|
Right Ascension |
18 :
45.2 (h:m) |
|
Declination |
-09 :
24 (deg:m) |
|
Distance |
5.0 (kly) |
|
Visual Brightness |
8.0 (mag) |
|
Apparent Dimension |
15.0
(arc min) |
Discovered by Charles Messier in 1764.
Open cluster Messier 26 (M26, NGC 6694) is not so impressive as its
apparent neighbor,
M11. Its discoverer
Charles Messier, who
cataloged it on June 20, 1764, even noted that it was "not distinguished
in a 3.5 foot (FL) telescope and needed a better instrument."
Nevertheless, this is a tight, beautiful open cluster with brightest
stars of mag 11.9, spectral type B8. Burnham mentions about 25 stars visible
in 6-8 inch scopes and about 70 fainter members, Mallas/Kreimer overall 90.
Its diameter of 22 light-years appear as 15 arc minutes from the 5,000 light
years distance. The Sky Catalogue 2000.0 gives a calculated age of 89
million years for this cluster.
As Kenneth Glyn Jones mentions, James Cuffey of the Kirkwood Observatory,
Indiana University, reported that a striking feature of this cluster is a
well-defined zone of low star density in a region of diameter 3'.1,
immediately surrounding the nucleus. It is more probable that this region is
obscured by dark interstellar matter than that it is a real "hole" in the
stellar population.
M26 was classified as of Trumpler type II,2,r (Trumpler), I,1,m (Sky
Catalog 2000), and II,3,m (Götz).
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