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M34

NGC 1039

Open Cluster Excellent (68/100)
NGC 1039 OpenCluster Per Visible Level 1 Naked eye / Binoculars - Wide field preferred
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Properties

Magnitude 5.2
Angular Size 22.5′
Cl, B, vL, lC, sc st 9; = M34

Position & Identifiers

RA 02h 42m 00.0s
Dec +42° 46' 60.0"
Constellation Per
Catalog NGC 1039

Visibility

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Eyepiece View

108x TFOV: 0.5° Lim. mag: 13.3
N E

M34 · 22.5′ diameter · N up, E left

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About M34

Description

M34 is a bright, fairly large open cluster in Perseus, about 1,500 light-years from Earth. It contains roughly 100 stars spread across about 14 light-years, with an age of approximately 200 million years. The cluster's brightest members are blue-white main sequence stars, with several yellow and orange evolved stars mixed in.

Observing Tips

Located about 5 degrees northwest of Algol (Beta Persei). Visible to the naked eye under dark skies as a faint, hazy patch. Binoculars show a loose scattering of stars about the size of the full Moon. A telescope at 30-50x provides the best view, revealing about 40 stars in attractive chains and pairs. Higher magnification loses the cluster's visual impact. Best observed from October through February.

History

Discovered by Giovanni Battista Hodierna before 1654 and independently noted by Charles Messier in 1764. John Herschel described it as a 'coarsely scattered cluster of stars.'

Fun Facts

M34 is close enough and young enough that astronomers have used it to study stellar rotation rates at intermediate ages. The cluster sits roughly the same distance from us as the Perseus Double Cluster, but in a completely different part of the sky.