Kemble's Cascade Cluster — Aglomerado Aberto em Girafa
NGC 1502
Sobre Kemble's Cascade Cluster
Descrição
NGC 1502 is a small, bright open cluster in the northern constellation Camelopardalis, about 2,700 light-years away. It is famous less for the cluster itself than for its position at the southern end of Kemble's Cascade — a beautiful string of roughly 20 brighter stars stretching 2.5 degrees from north to south, named by amateur astronomer Father Lucian Kemble in the 1980s. The cluster contains two prominent matched white stars at its center (Struve 485, a wide visual double), with a few dozen other bright members scattered around them. It is compact, symmetric, and rich in close and optical double stars, making it a wonderful multiple-star hunting ground.
Dicas de Observação
Best appreciated as the punctuation mark at the end of Kemble's Cascade. In binoculars the full cascade flows down a tilted field of view, with NGC 1502 as a tight bright knot at one end. A 4- to 6-inch telescope at 50-100x resolves the double-star heart of the cluster (Struve 485) and several other multiples. The key is to use a low-power, wide-field eyepiece first to appreciate the cascade, then zoom in on the cluster itself. Camelopardalis is a faint constellation so dark skies help enormously. Circumpolar from most of the northern hemisphere — visible year-round.
História
Discovered by William Herschel on November 3, 1787. The Kemble's Cascade asterism that frames the cluster was popularized by Walter Scott Houston (the 'Deep-Sky Wonders' columnist for Sky & Telescope) in a 1980 article based on a letter from Father Lucian Kemble, a Franciscan astronomer in Alberta, Canada. Kemble had noted the elegant star chain while sweeping through the region with 7x35 binoculars. The asterism and the cluster are now inseparable in modern observing lore, and the informal name 'Jolly Roger Cluster' — from the Struve 485 pair — also appears in some guides.
Curiosidades
Kemble's Cascade is one of the most famous asterisms of the late-20th-century amateur revival, and is often the single object that introduces observers to the idea of 'asterisms' (chance alignments of unrelated stars) as legitimate observing targets. Father Lucian Kemble continued to discover and name other asterisms in northern-sky sweeps, and a handful of 'Kemble's 2', 'Kemble's Kite,' etc. populate modern atlases. The cluster's bright double Struve 485 was cataloged by Wilhelm Struve in the 1820s — one of his easier targets from Dorpat Observatory.
Observar
1Propriedades
Posição e Identificadores
2Facilidade de observação
| Telescópio | Bortle 3 | Bortle 4 | Bortle 5 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Refrator 80 mm Refr. 80mm | Fácil | Fácil | Fácil |
| Newton 150 mm Newt. 150mm | Fácil | Fácil | Fácil |
| Celestron C8 (SCT 203 mm) C8 203mm | Fácil | Fácil | Fácil |
Bortle 3 = rural · 4 = suburbano · 5 = urbano
3Visibilidade
Defina um local nas Configurações do Usuário para ver dados de visibilidade.
4
Vista pela Ocular
Kemble's Cascade Cluster · 10.2′ diâmetro · N cima, L esquerda
5
Melhor Ampliação
6Onde este aglomerado se situa no tempo
Aglomerados abertos abrangem mais de quatro ordens de grandeza em idade — de associações OB recém-nascidas a sobreviventes antigos e ricos em metais.
7
Diagrama cor-magnitude
O diagrama cor-magnitude de um aglomerado revela sua idade: quanto mais azul o ponto de virada onde a sequência principal se curva para as gigantes vermelhas, mais jovem o aglomerado.
Cada ponto é um membro do Gaia-DR3. A cor codifica o tipo espectral; o tamanho reflete a probabilidade de pertença.
Explorar
8
Decodificador de Classificação
Imagem de Levantamento
Carregando imagem de levantamento…
Próximos no céu
Outros alvos a poucos graus — mova um pouco o telescópio e continue explorando.
Os scores de visibilidade assumem um Newton de 150 mm com Bortle 4.
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