A place were I can write...
My simple blog of pictures of travel, friends, activities and the Universe we live in as we go slowly around the Sun.
February 24, 2014
The Beehive...
A mere 600 light-years away, M44 is one of the closest star clusters to our
solar system. Also known as the Praesepe or the Beehive
cluster its stars are young though, about 600 million years old compared to
our Sun's 4.5 billion
years. Based on similar ages and motion through space, M44 and the even closer
Hyades star cluster in Taurus are thought to have
been born together in the same large molecular cloud. An open cluster spanning
some 15 light-years, M44 holds 1,000 stars or so and covers about 3 full moons
(1.5 degrees) on the sky in the constellation Cancer. Visible to the unaided
eye, M44 has been recognized since antiquity. Described as a faint cloud or
celestial mist long before being included as the 44th entry in Charles Messier's
18th century catalog, the cluster was not resolved into its individual stars
until telescopes were available. A popular target for modern, binocular-equiped
sky gazers, the cluster's few yellowish tinted,
cool, red giants are scattered through the field of
its brighter hot blue main sequence stars in this colorful stellar group snapshot.
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