05.06.2013 Views

The Caldwell Objects

The Caldwell Objects

The Caldwell Objects

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

16<br />

16<br />

NGC 7243<br />

Type: Open Cluster<br />

Con: Lacerta<br />

RA: 22 h 15.0 m<br />

Dec: +49° 54'<br />

Mag: 6.4<br />

Diam: 30'<br />

Dist: ~2,500 light years<br />

Disc: William Herschel,<br />

1788<br />

W. H ERSCHEL: [Observed<br />

26 September 1788] A clus-<br />

ter of coarsely scattered<br />

[bright] stars, a little<br />

extended, 16' in diameter.<br />

(HVIII-75)<br />

GC/NGC: Cluster, large,<br />

poor, little compressed,<br />

stars very [bright].<br />

LACERTA, THE LIZARD, IS ONE OF THE TINIEST<br />

creatures inhabiting the far-northern celestial<br />

sphere. With only 201 square degrees of sky<br />

inside its roughly rectangular borders, it is also<br />

among the smallest constellations in the entire<br />

heavens. Johannes Hevelius formed the constellation<br />

in 1687, robbing stars from Cygnus, the<br />

Swan, and Andromeda, the Chained Maiden, to<br />

do so. He crafted the Lizard to fit within the<br />

narrow space between those previously<br />

established constellations. Today the Lizard<br />

slinks around the sky virtually unnoticed. Alpha<br />

(α) Lacertae, the constellation's brightest star,<br />

shines at a meager magnitude 3.8 (though it does<br />

make a fine double, with a 12th-magnitude<br />

companion 36" away). Some beginners' observing<br />

guides and star charts fail<br />

even to recognize the constellation.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Lizard seemingly leaps off the northern<br />

forefoot of the winged horse Pegasus toward the<br />

Swan's tail. In doing so it jumps straight into a<br />

rich swath of Milky Way. Even so, of the eight<br />

open clusters, three possible clusters, one<br />

asterism, three planetary nebulae, and scores of<br />

galaxies and nebulae in Lacerta, only two objects<br />

are worth spending time on with a small<br />

telescope: the open cluster NGC 7209 (briefly<br />

described in the <strong>Caldwell</strong> 19 installment) and the<br />

open cluster NGC 7243 (<strong>Caldwell</strong> 16).<br />

To the naked eye NGC 7243 is a weak magnitude-6.4<br />

glow 2½° west-southwest of Alpha (α)<br />

Lacertae. Seeing the cluster with the unaided eye<br />

is difficult because of its proximity to a<br />

72 Deep-Sky Companions: <strong>The</strong> <strong>Caldwell</strong> <strong>Objects</strong>

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!