NGC 1528 — Aglomerado Aberto em Perseu
Sobre NGC 1528
Descrição
NGC 1528 is a bright, moderately rich open cluster in Perseus, about 2,500 light-years away. At magnitude 6.4 it sits just on the threshold of naked-eye visibility from a dark site, and in binoculars it displays perhaps 40 to 60 stars scattered across 24 arcminutes — roughly the width of the full Moon. The cluster lies in a rich Milky Way field between the famous Perseus OB2 association and the Double Cluster, and it pairs naturally with its fainter neighbor NGC 1545, which lies less than a degree to the south-southwest. Both clusters are young (~300 million years) and share the general population of hot B-type stars typical of Perseus.
Dicas de Observação
A fine binocular and small-telescope target. In 10x50 binoculars it appears as a small resolved clump of perhaps a dozen bright stars set in a hazy background. A 4-inch telescope at 40-60x is ideal: the cluster fills the field with 50+ stars arranged in several loose chains and clumps with distinct darker lanes crossing it. Pair the view with NGC 1545 to the south for a nice double-cluster session separate from the more famous NGC 869/884 pair. Best observed from October through March when Perseus is high in the evening sky.
História
Discovered by William Herschel on December 28, 1790. Herschel described it as 'a beautiful cluster of large stars,' noting it was easily resolved. It appears in most 19th and 20th century observing guides as a secondary Perseus target eclipsed by the fame of the nearby Double Cluster. Modern studies have refined its distance and age, confirming its membership in the young population of stars filling the Perseus arm of the Milky Way.
Curiosidades
NGC 1528 is one of several very nice Perseus clusters that get overlooked because the Double Cluster is so nearby and so spectacular. Observers who take the time to sweep the full Perseus Milky Way often come away surprised at how rich the region is beyond the famous pair. The cluster is slowly dispersing; in about another 100 million years its member stars will have drifted far enough apart that it will no longer look like a cluster at all.
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
NGC 1528 · 9.6′ diâmetro
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
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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