Double cluster — Aglomerado Aberto em Perseu
NGC 884
Sobre Double cluster
Descrição
NGC 884 is the eastern half of the famous Double Cluster in Perseus — historically designated chi Persei, while its western twin NGC 869 is h Persei. The pair, together cataloged as Caldwell 14, lies about 7,500 light-years away and consists of two young open clusters separated by only a few hundred light-years. Each cluster contains hundreds of hot blue and yellow supergiant stars roughly 12-14 million years old. Together they are one of the most spectacular binocular sights in the entire northern sky. NGC 884 on its own is slightly more compact and star-rich than its partner, with a distinct splash of contrasting colored supergiants.
Dicas de Observação
Visible to the naked eye from dark skies as a conspicuous fuzzy knot between Cassiopeia and Perseus. Binoculars reveal the Double Cluster's overall shape beautifully; a small refractor at 30-40x frames both halves in the same low-power field. For NGC 884 specifically, a 4- to 6-inch telescope at 50-80x shows several orange and yellow-red supergiants scattered among the bluer cluster stars — the color contrast is often cited as the most striking feature of the cluster. Best observed from August through February when Perseus climbs high.
História
Both halves of the Double Cluster have been known since antiquity as a naked-eye pair. Hipparchus cataloged them around 130 BC as a single object. They appear in star charts across cultures for millennia. The 'h and chi Persei' letters were assigned by Johann Bayer in 1603, and William Herschel later gave them separate NGC-precursor designations. Photographic studies in the early 20th century confirmed that the two clusters are at nearly the same distance and similar age — they are almost certainly a physical double formed from the same molecular cloud.
Curiosidades
The Double Cluster is one of the youngest open clusters known in the Milky Way, so young that its hottest O- and B-class stars are still on the main sequence, having not yet evolved into red supergiants — though several intermediate-mass stars are caught in transition. Because NGC 884 is paired with NGC 869 in the C14 Caldwell entry, many observing guides treat the Double Cluster as a single target; in ObLog it is split across two catalog pages, with this one covering the chi Persei half.
Observar
1Propriedades
Posição e Identificadores
2Facilidade de observação
| Telescópio | Bortle 3 | Bortle 4 | Bortle 5 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Refrator 80 mm Refr. 80mm | Fácil | Fácil | Fácil |
| Newton 150 mm Newt. 150mm | Fácil | Fácil | Fácil |
| Celestron C8 (SCT 203 mm) C8 203mm | Fácil | Fácil | Fácil |
Bortle 3 = rural · 4 = suburbano · 5 = urbano
3Visibilidade
Defina um local nas Configurações do Usuário para ver dados de visibilidade.
4
Vista pela Ocular
Double cluster · 10.5′ diâmetro
5
Melhor Ampliação
6Onde este aglomerado se situa no tempo
Aglomerados abertos abrangem mais de quatro ordens de grandeza em idade — de associações OB recém-nascidas a sobreviventes antigos e ricos em metais.
7
Diagrama cor-magnitude
O diagrama cor-magnitude de um aglomerado revela sua idade: quanto mais azul o ponto de virada onde a sequência principal se curva para as gigantes vermelhas, mais jovem o aglomerado.
Cada ponto é um membro do Gaia-DR3. A cor codifica o tipo espectral; o tamanho reflete a probabilidade de pertença.
Explorar
8
Decodificador de Classificação
Próximos no céu
Outros alvos a poucos graus — mova um pouco o telescópio e continue explorando.
Os scores de visibilidade assumem um Newton de 150 mm com Bortle 4.
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