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M29

Cooling Tower Cluster

Aglomerado Aberto Bom (57/100)
M29 OpenCluster Cygnus Visível Nível 3 Medium telescope (6-8") - Wide field preferred
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Propriedades

Magnitude 7.1
Tamanho Angular 3.6′
Distância 7200 ly
Open Cluster [Distance: 7200 ly]

Posição e Identificadores

RA 20h 23m 56.0s
Dec +38° 31' 24.0"
Constelação Cygnus
Catálogo M29

Visibilidade

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Sobre M29

Descrição

M29 is a small, sparse open cluster in Cygnus, about 4,000 light-years from Earth. It contains only about 20 confirmed members spread across roughly 11 light-years. The cluster is young, at about 10 million years, and its brightest stars are hot blue giants. Heavy interstellar absorption dims it by about 3 magnitudes.

Dicas de Observação

Located about 1.7 degrees south of Gamma Cygni (Sadr), at the center of the Northern Cross. Easy to find but visually unimpressive. Binoculars show a small, tight group of 6-8 stars. A telescope at 50-80x shows a compact parallelogram pattern of bright stars. The cluster sits in an extraordinarily rich Milky Way field. Best observed from July through October.

História

Discovered by Charles Messier on July 29, 1764. It is one of the least impressive Messier objects visually, containing few stars and little visual impact compared to the rich star fields surrounding it.

Curiosidades

Without interstellar absorption, M29 would appear about 3 magnitudes brighter — roughly 15 times more luminous than we see it. The heavy dust in the Cygnus region dims and reddens the cluster significantly. Despite its modest appearance, M29's massive young stars are intrinsically among the most luminous in any Messier cluster.

Fotos da Comunidade (1)

Credit: Veryoldphotons. License: CC BY-SA 4.0. (Wikimedia Commons)

Credit: Veryoldphotons. License: CC BY-SA 4.0. (Wikimedia Commons)

Skybred Feb 28, 2026