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M52

Scorpion Cluster

OpenCluster Cassiopeia Mag 7.3

Object Data

Catalog Designation
M52
Type
OpenCluster
Constellation
Cassiopeia
Magnitude
7.3
Right Ascension
23h 24m 12.0s
Declination
+61° 35' 00.0"
Distance
4,600 light-years
Angular Size
13.
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About M52

Description

M52 is a rich, bright open cluster in Cassiopeia, about 5,000 light-years from Earth. It contains roughly 190 stars spread across about 19 light-years, with an age of about 35 million years. The cluster has a fan or kidney shape, with a prominent orange star at its western edge.

Observing Tips

Located at the end of an imaginary line from Alpha through Beta Cassiopeiae, extended by about the same distance. In binoculars it appears as a bright, nebulous patch. A telescope at 60-100x reveals a rich, compressed cluster with a fan-shaped outline. The bright orange-yellow star at the southwest edge is a foreground star, not a cluster member. The Bubble Nebula (NGC 7635) lies just 35 arcminutes to the southwest. Best observed from September through January.

History

Discovered by Charles Messier on September 7, 1774. It was one of the later additions to his original catalog. Caroline Herschel independently noted it in 1783.

Fun Facts

M52 is one of the most underrated Messier clusters. Its richness and compact shape rival many better-known objects. The nearby Bubble Nebula (NGC 7635), a shell of gas blown by a hot massive star, makes for an attractive wide-field companion — though the nebula requires a large telescope and narrowband filter to see visually.

Community Photos (1)

Credit: Unknown. License: Public domain. (Wikimedia Commons)

Credit: Unknown. License: Public domain. (Wikimedia Commons)

Skybred Feb 28, 2026