Menu

Caldwell 28 — Open Cluster in Andromeda

NGC 752

Open Cluster Showpiece (86/100)
Magnitude 5.7m OpenCluster Andromeda Visible
Star Map
+ List + Plan Star Hop

About C28

Description

NGC 752 is a large, sparse open cluster in Andromeda, about 1,300 light-years away. At roughly 1.1 billion years old, it is one of the older open clusters and spans a generous 50 arcminutes across the sky.

Observing Tips

Best in binoculars or a wide-field telescope at low power, as the cluster is too large for typical eyepiece fields. About 60 stars from magnitude 8-10 are spread across nearly a full degree. Best in autumn and winter evenings.

History

Possibly observed by Giovanni Battista Hodierna before 1654. Independently found by Caroline Herschel in 1783. One of the benchmark clusters used to calibrate stellar evolution models.

Fun Facts

NGC 752 is old enough that its most massive stars have already evolved off the main sequence, leaving a characteristic red giant branch that helps astronomers test stellar evolution theories.

Observe

1Properties

Magnitude 5.7
Angular Size 39.0′
Distance 1,300 ly
Open Cluster [Distance: 1300 ly]

Position & Identifiers

RA 01h 57m 24.0s
Dec +37° 49' 01.2"
Constellation Andromeda
Catalog C28
Also known as NGC 752
Physical size
18 light-years across — about 2.1× the Sun-to-Sirius distance

2How easy to spot?

Sign in and configure your equipment and default location to see a personalized row.
Telescope Bortle 3 Bortle 4 Bortle 5
80mm refr. Easy Easy Easy
150mm Newt. Easy Easy Easy
C8 203mm Easy Easy Easy
Easy Medium Hard Very hard Impossible

Bortle 3 = rural · 4 = outer suburbs · 5 = suburbs

Easy on Seestar S50
At 150mm under B5 skies you should resolve about 128 of 223 members.

3Visibility

Set a location in User Settings to see visibility data.

Best season Sep – Nov (peak: Oct)

4 Eyepiece View

Log in to set your own equipment
50x TFOV: 1.0° Lim. mag: 13.6
N E

C28 · 39.0′ diameter

5 Best Magnification

6Where this cluster sits in time

1 Myr 10 Myr 100 Myr 1 Gyr 10 Gyr NGC 2362 Pleiades M67 NGC 188 C28 1.2 Gyr

Open clusters span more than four orders of magnitude in age — from newborn OB associations to ancient, metal-rich survivors.

7 Colour-Magnitude Diagram

A cluster's colour-magnitude diagram reveals its age: the bluer the turn-off point where the main sequence bends into red giants, the younger the cluster.

Loading member data…

Each point is a Gaia-DR3 member. Colour encodes spectral type; size reflects membership probability.

Explore

8 Classification Decoder

Discover

9

Light Travel Time Machine

10

Relativistic Travel

Community Photos (1)

Credit: Roberto Mura. License: CC BY-SA 3.0. (Wikimedia Commons)

Credit: Roberto Mura. License: CC BY-SA 3.0. (Wikimedia Commons)

Skybred Mar 2, 2026

Nearby in the Sky

Other targets within a few degrees — pan your scope a little and keep exploring.

Visibility scores assume a 150 mm Newton at Bortle 4.

}