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C50

NGC 2244

OpenCluster Monoceros Mag 4.8

Object Data

Catalog Designation
C50
Type
OpenCluster
Constellation
Monoceros
Magnitude
4.8
Right Ascension
06h 31m 52.1s
Declination
+04° 54' 00.0"
Distance
5,200 light-years
Angular Size
24
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About C50

Description

NGC 2244 is the bright open cluster at the center of the Rosette Nebula (C49) in Monoceros, about 5,200 light-years away. It contains about 16 hot, luminous OB-type stars arranged in a rectangular pattern, spanning about 24 arcminutes.

Observing Tips

An easy and attractive cluster even without the nebula. Binoculars show several bright stars in a distinctive rectangle. A telescope at 30-50x frames it nicely. To see the surrounding Rosette Nebula, add an OIII filter. Best in winter.

History

Discovered by John Flamsteed around 1690. The cluster is only about 2 million years old and its massive stars are responsible for illuminating and sculpting the Rosette Nebula.

Fun Facts

The most massive star in NGC 2244 is the O5 star HD 46223, which is about 50 times more massive than the Sun and 400,000 times as luminous. These stars will end their lives as supernovae within the next few million years.

Community Photos (2)

Credit: Stephen Rahn. License: CC0. (Wikimedia Commons)

Credit: Stephen Rahn. License: CC0. (Wikimedia Commons)

Skybred Mar 2, 2026

1
Astrophoto of C50 by Skybred

Skybred Mar 9, 2026