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Tweedledee Cluster — Open Cluster in Ophiuchus

NGC 6633

Open Cluster Excellent (71/100)
OpenCluster Ophiuchus (Oph) Visible
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About Tweedledee Cluster

Description

NGC 6633 is a large, bright open cluster in the constellation Ophiuchus, about 1,200 light-years from Earth. Commonly known as the Tweedledee Cluster, it is roughly the size of the full Moon and contains about 30 bright blue stars strewn across a rich Milky Way background — a splendid target for any optical aid from binoculars upward. It forms a famous visual pair with the nearby cluster IC 4756 (sometimes called Tweedledum or Graff's Cluster), which lies just 3 degrees to the east; the two are often framed together in low-power surveys along the summer Milky Way. Both clusters share similar age (~700 million years) though they lie at different distances.

Observing Tips

An ideal binocular target. NGC 6633 is visible to the naked eye from dark sites as a small misty patch. In 7x50 or 10x50 binoculars it resolves into a striking elongated chain of bright blue stars scattered across a rich Milky Way field — a textbook 'binocular cluster.' A small telescope at 20-30x frames the cluster beautifully but high magnification dilutes its spread-out character. Pair the view with IC 4756 three degrees east for the full 'Tweedledee/Tweedledum' experience. Best observed from June through September when Ophiuchus is high in the evening.

History

Cataloged in 1702 by the German astronomer Philippe Loys de Chéseaux's predecessor Johannes Hevelius, though William Herschel is more commonly credited with its rediscovery in the 1780s. The cluster appears in most 19th-century observing guides. The 'Tweedledee' nickname — a whimsical pair with IC 4756's 'Tweedledum' — appears to have originated in amateur astronomy literature of the 20th century, a nod to Lewis Carroll's characters. The name is informal but widely recognized in modern observing handbooks.

Fun Facts

NGC 6633 is sometimes called the 'Summer Beehive,' though that informal nickname competes with a few other clusters. It lies almost exactly on the celestial equator, making it equally accessible from both hemispheres. Despite its size and brightness, it is often overlooked by deep-sky observers because it has no official Messier or Caldwell designation — one of the reasons it is a quiet favorite among binocular astronomers who keep their own 'should-have-been-in-Messier' lists.

Observe

1Properties

Magnitude 4.6
Angular Size 12.0′
Cl, lC, st L

Position & Identifiers

RA 18h 27m 42.0s
Dec +06° 34' 00.0"
Constellation Ophiuchus (Oph)
Catalog NGC 6633
Physical size
4.8 light-years across — about 1.1× the Sun-to-Alpha-Centauri 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 70 of 148 members.

3Visibility

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Best season May – Jul (peak: Jun)

4 Eyepiece View

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125x TFOV: 0.4° Lim. mag: 13.6
N E

Tweedledee Cluster · 12.0′ diameter · N up, E left

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 Tweedledee Cluster 692 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.

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Each point is a Gaia-DR3 member. Colour encodes spectral type; size reflects membership probability.

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8 Classification Decoder

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