Caroline's Rose — Ammasso aperto in Cassiopea
NGC 7789
Su Caroline's Rose
Descrizione
NGC 7789 is a rich, densely populated open cluster in Cassiopeia, about 7,600 light-years away, popularly known as Caroline's Rose or the White Rose Cluster for its intricate star-strewn structure resembling the layered petals of a rose. The cluster contains over 1,000 stars and is one of the oldest open clusters still visibly recognizable in the Milky Way — its age is estimated at 1.6 billion years. Its population includes both blue main-sequence stars and a well-populated red-giant branch, making it one of the best 'snapshots' of stellar evolution a visual observer can inspect in a single field.
Consigli per l'osservazione
A showpiece for 4-inch telescopes and larger, where it reveals its rose-like density. In binoculars it appears as a small soft glow, resolved only into a handful of its brightest members. A 4-inch at 80-100x shows the full layered structure: clumps of stars separated by subtly darker lanes, arranged in graceful curves that inspire the 'petal' imagery. An 8-inch at moderate magnification is glorious — the cluster holds up to scrutiny and grows more intricate the more you look. Use averted vision to draw out the faintest members. Best observed August through February when Cassiopeia is circumpolar and high.
Storia
Discovered by Caroline Herschel in 1783 during one of her systematic sweeps of the Milky Way with a small sweeper telescope of her own design. Caroline was the first professional woman astronomer and catalogued 14 new deep-sky objects; this was one of her most beautiful. Her brother William Herschel later included it in his General Catalogue, and Dreyer gave it the NGC 7789 designation. The 'Caroline's Rose' nickname was bestowed by modern amateur astronomers in tribute to her, and it has become the cluster's most widely used informal name.
Curiosità
NGC 7789 is one of the richest open clusters visible in modest amateur telescopes, and its age of 1.6 billion years means it has already lost most of its original hot massive stars to supernovae — what you see today is the slightly older, redder remnant population. Caroline Herschel used a handmade 5-foot-focal-length reflector given to her by William; with it she discovered 8 comets and 14 deep-sky objects. Today she is commemorated by a crater on the Moon and by this cluster's informal name.
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
Caroline's Rose · 14.4′ diametro · N su, E sinistra
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
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Decodificatore di Classificazione
Immagine survey
Caricamento immagine survey…
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.