NGC 1907 — Ammasso aperto in Auriga
Su NGC 1907
Descrizione
NGC 1907 is a small, moderately dense open cluster in Auriga, about 4,500 light-years away, notable mostly because it lies only 30 arcminutes southwest of the much brighter and more famous Messier 38. The two clusters are almost always observed in the same field of view, making NGC 1907 an automatic bonus for anyone who looks at M38. They appear physically close but are likely at somewhat different distances — a probable optical association rather than a true gravitationally-bound pair, though the question has been revisited several times in the literature. NGC 1907 is older and more compact than M38, roughly half a billion years old.
Consigli per l'osservazione
Trivially found by anyone looking at M38 — NGC 1907 sits in the same low-power eyepiece, a smaller and more concentrated glow than its famous neighbor. In binoculars the pair is a fine sight, with M38 as the brighter patch and NGC 1907 as a small dim companion to its southwest. A 4-inch telescope at 50-80x frames both clusters together; at 100-150x NGC 1907 resolves into a compact knot of 30 or so stars arranged in an elongated oval. A nice exercise in contrast between the two different cluster ages and populations. Best observed November through March.
Storia
Discovered by William Herschel on February 1, 1788. Herschel noted its proximity to M38 but did not speculate on any physical connection. The possibility that NGC 1907 and M38 form a true binary cluster has been revisited several times in the 20th century, most recently with Gaia astrometry, which suggests their motions are too different for them to be bound — they are an optical rather than physical pair. The cluster otherwise has led a quiet observational life in the shadow of its famous Messier neighbor.
Curiosità
NGC 1907 and M38 are the most commonly photographed accidental cluster pair in the northern sky — if you search deep-sky photography portfolios, chances are about half of M38 images also include NGC 1907 by default, simply because they fit together. The Auriga Milky Way here is one of the richest cluster fields in the northern sky, with M36, M37, and M38 all within a few degrees; NGC 1907 is the quiet extra credit.
Osservare
1Proprietà
Posizione e identificatori
2Facilità di osservazione
| Telescopio | Bortle 3 | Bortle 4 | Bortle 5 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rifrattore 80 mm Rifr. 80mm | Facile | Facile | Facile |
| Newton 150 mm Newt. 150mm | Facile | Facile | Facile |
| Celestron C8 (SCT 203 mm) C8 203mm | Facile | Facile | Facile |
Bortle 3 = rurale · 4 = periferia · 5 = suburbano
3Visibilità
Imposta una località nelle impostazioni per vedere i dati di visibilità.
4
Vista oculare
NGC 1907 · 5.4′ diametro
5
Miglior Ingrandimento
6Dove si colloca questo ammasso nel tempo
Gli ammassi aperti coprono oltre quattro ordini di grandezza nell'età — dai neonati complessi OB a sopravvissuti antichi e ricchi di metalli.
7
Diagramma colore-magnitudine
Il diagramma colore-magnitudine di un ammasso ne rivela l'età: più è blu il punto di svolta in cui la sequenza principale si piega verso le giganti rosse, più giovane è l'ammasso.
Ogni punto è un membro di Gaia-DR3. Il colore codifica il tipo spettrale; la dimensione riflette la probabilità di appartenenza.
Esplorare
8
Decodificatore di Classificazione
Vicini nel cielo
Altri bersagli a pochi gradi — sposta un po’ il telescopio e continua a esplorare.
I punteggi di visibilità assumono un Newton da 150 mm con Bortle 4.
Esplora Nightbase
Conoscenze, strumenti e storie correlate — senza pianificare osservazioni.