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Caldwell 54 — Open Cluster in Monoceros

NGC 2506

Open Cluster Excellent (60/100)
Magnitude 7.6m OpenCluster Monoceros Visible
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About C54

Description

NGC 2506 is an open cluster in Monoceros, about 10,000 light-years away. It is a rich, compact cluster containing over 150 stars concentrated in about 7 arcminutes, with an age of roughly 2 billion years.

Observing Tips

Visible as a hazy, unresolved patch in a 4-inch telescope. An 8-inch scope begins to resolve the brighter stars at 100x+. The cluster's distance makes it harder to resolve than most open clusters. Best in winter evenings.

History

Discovered by William Herschel on February 23, 1791. Its great distance and old age make it a valuable laboratory for studying stellar evolution in open clusters.

Fun Facts

At about 2 billion years old, NGC 2506 is one of the oldest open clusters still recognizable as a cluster. It has survived because it orbits relatively far from the galactic plane, avoiding the gravitational disruptions that tear most clusters apart.

Observe

1Properties

Magnitude 7.6
Angular Size 10.8′
Distance 11,000 ly
Open Cluster [Distance: 11000 ly]

Position & Identifiers

RA 08h 00m 02.4s
Dec -10° 46' 26.4"
Constellation Monoceros
Catalog C54
Also known as NGC 2506
Physical size
33 light-years across — about 3.8× the Sun-to-Sirius distance

2How easy to spot?

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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 43 of 800 members.

3Visibility

Set a location in User Settings to see visibility data.

Best season Dec – Feb (peak: Jan)

4 Eyepiece View

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125x TFOV: 0.4° Lim. mag: 13.6
N E

C54 · 10.8′ diameter

5 Best Magnification

6Where this cluster sits in time

1 Myr 10 Myr 100 Myr 1 Gyr 10 Gyr NGC 2362 Pleiades Hyades M67 NGC 188 C54 1.7 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: YayLol123. License: CC BY 4.0. (Wikimedia Commons)

Credit: YayLol123. License: CC BY 4.0. (Wikimedia Commons)

Skybred Mar 2, 2026

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