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NGC 7086 — Open Cluster in Cygnus

Open Cluster Good (48/100)
Magnitude 8.4m OpenCluster Cygnus (Cyg) Visible
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1Properties

Magnitude 8.4
Angular Size 4.8′
Cl, cL, vRi, pC, st 11...16

Position & Identifiers

RA 21h 30m 27.6s
Dec +51° 36' 01.8"
Constellation Cygnus (Cyg)
Catalog NGC 7086
Physical size
7.6 light-years across — about 1.7× 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 67 of 592 members.

3Visibility

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Best season Jul – Sep (peak: Aug)

4 Eyepiece View

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125x TFOV: 0.4° Lim. mag: 13.6
N E

NGC 7086 · 4.8′ diameter

5 Best Magnification

6Where this cluster sits in time

1 Myr 10 Myr 100 Myr 1 Gyr 10 Gyr NGC 2362 Hyades M67 NGC 188 NGC 7086 195 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.

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8 Classification Decoder

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