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NGC 1647 — Open Cluster in Taurus

Open Cluster Excellent (65/100)
Magnitude 6.4m OpenCluster Taurus (Tau) Visible
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About NGC 1647

Description

NGC 1647 is a large, loose open cluster in Taurus, about 1,800 light-years away, sitting just over 3 degrees northeast of Aldebaran. It contains roughly 200 members spread across about 45 arcminutes — well over a full Moon's diameter — with the brightest stars at magnitude 8.5 to 9.5. The cluster is around 150 million years old, intermediate in age between the Pleiades and the Hyades, and is one of the more substantial open clusters in the constellation outside those two famous neighbours.

Observing Tips

A naked-eye-fringe target from dark skies, where it appears as a faint hazy patch east of Aldebaran. Binoculars and small telescopes give the most pleasing view — a 4-inch at low power frames the cluster comfortably, with several dozen stars resolved against the rich Taurus star field. Larger scopes oversample the loose distribution and tend to dissolve the cluster's coherence. Aim a half-degree-plus eyepiece field at the area between Aldebaran and Zeta Tauri to find it. Best observed November through March.

History

Discovered by William Herschel on 15 February 1784. NGC 1647 was a popular target in early systematic open-cluster studies because of its large size and easy location, and it featured in 20th-century photometric surveys aimed at calibrating the main-sequence ages of intermediate clusters.

Fun Facts

Despite being only about 4 degrees from Aldebaran in the sky, NGC 1647 is more than ten times farther away — the proximity is purely a line-of-sight coincidence. The cluster sits well beyond the Hyades, on the far side of the Local Bubble in the direction of the Galactic anticenter.

Observe

1Properties

Magnitude 6.4
Angular Size 27.0′
Cl, vL, st L, sc

Position & Identifiers

RA 04h 45m 55.6s
Dec +19° 05' 42.4"
Constellation Taurus (Tau)
Catalog NGC 1647
Physical size
16 light-years across — about 1.9× 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 165 of 600 members.

3Visibility

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Best season Oct – Dec (peak: Nov)

4 Eyepiece View

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50x TFOV: 1.0° Lim. mag: 13.6
N E

NGC 1647 · 27.0′ 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 NGC 1647 363 Myr

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

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