Visual Astronomy

MESSIER 44
none
   
RA:
08h 40m 00s
DEC:
+19° 40' 00''
Type:
Open cluster
NGC:
2632
Magnitude:
3.70
Surface brightness :
Apparent dimensions :
95'x95'
Distance:
577 ly
   
 

The Beehive Cluster (also known as Praesepe (Latin for "manger"), M44 or NGC 2632) is an open cluster in the constellation Cancer. It looks like a nebulous object to the naked eye under dark skies, and thus has been known since ancient times--Ptolemy called it "The nebulous mass in the breast" of Cancer. It is also among the first objects Galileo studied with his telescope.

The 730-million-year old cluster is 577 light years away; its age and proper motion coincide with the Hyades open cluster, suggesting they were created in the same diffuse nebula. Both contain red giants and white dwarfs, but the brightest stars are class A, F, and G stars. It contains at least 200 stars, and perhaps as many as 350.

Galileo was the first to observe the Beehive in a telescope, in 1609, and was able to resolve it into 40 stars. Charles Messier added it to his famous catalog in 1769 after precisely measuring its position in the sky. Along with the Orion Nebula and the Pleiades cluster, Messier's inclusion of the beehive has been noted as curious, as most of Messier's objects were much fainter and more easily confused with comets. One possibility is that Messier simply wanted to have a larger catalogue than his scientific rival Lacaille, whose 1755 catalogue contained 42 objects, and so he added some bright, well-known objects to boost his list.

The Beehive is most easily observed in the spring, when Cancer is high in the sky. At 95 arc minutes across, it fits well in the field of view of binoculars or a telescope of low power.

 

VEDRAN VRHOVAC©

2006.-2007.