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The Caldwell Objects

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photographs. <strong>The</strong> cluster's bright "eyes" seem to<br />

pierce the night with the fiery gaze of a specter<br />

emerging from the dusty, cobwebbed corridors of<br />

space. <strong>The</strong> ghost's clothes hang in tatters from its<br />

skeletal limbs. <strong>The</strong> dusty cobwebs, of course,<br />

belong to the network of dark material that<br />

permeates the Cassiopeia Milky Way. <strong>The</strong><br />

clothes, in contrast, belong to the combined glow<br />

of a hundred or more faint suns shimmering near<br />

or beyond the limit of resolution, like smoke<br />

rising from countless dying embers. Of the 200<br />

cluster members<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Caldwell</strong> <strong>Objects</strong><br />

13<br />

within a circle 20' (58 light-years) across,<br />

Luginbuhl and Skiff find 100 visible in an 8-inch<br />

telescope. Higher powers do little to enhance the<br />

view.<br />

By the way, Phi 1 Cassiopeiae itself is a<br />

double star, with a magnitude-12.2 companion<br />

49" away at a position angle of 208°. And if you<br />

bump your telescope 40' to the northwest, you<br />

will encounter the compact glow of the<br />

magnitude-8.8 open cluster NGC 436, whose<br />

brightest stars trace out three sharp arcs akin to<br />

the digits in a crow's foot.<br />

61

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