Celestial hemisphere:  Northern  ·  Constellation: Cancer (Cnc)  ·  Contains:  38 Cnc  ·  39 Cnc  ·  40 Cnc  ·  41 Cnc)  ·  41 eps Cnc  ·  42 Cnc  ·  Almalaf (ε Cnc  ·  Beehive  ·  Beehive cluster  ·  HD73345  ·  HD73397  ·  HD73430  ·  HD73449  ·  HD73450  ·  HD73598  ·  HD73618  ·  HD73619  ·  HD73709  ·  HD73710  ·  HD73711  ·  HD73730  ·  HD73818  ·  HD73819  ·  HD73854  ·  HD73872  ·  HD73936  ·  HD73974  ·  IC 2388  ·  IC 2390  ·  M 44  ·  And 10 more.
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M44 Praesepe (Beehive) Core, Mau_Bard
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M44 Praesepe (Beehive) Core

Getting plate-solving status, please wait...
M44 Praesepe (Beehive) Core, Mau_Bard
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M44 Praesepe (Beehive) Core

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Description

Notwithstanding fog and humidity (and heaters not working  ) , the night of 15 February 2023, I managed to take a few sub-exposures of this beautiful neighbor. With a simple binocular it is a true joy for the eyes!

M44

The Beehive Cluster (also known as Praesepe (Latin for "manger" or "crib"), M44, NGC 2632, or Cr 189), is an open cluster in the constellation Cancer. One of the nearest open clusters to Earth, it contains a larger population of stars than other nearby bright open clusters holding around 1,000 stars. Under dark skies, the Beehive Cluster looks like a small nebulous object to the naked eye, and has been known since ancient times. Classical astronomer Ptolemy described it as a "nebulous mass in the breast of Cancer". It was among the first objects that Galileo studied with his telescope.

Age and proper motion coincide with those of the Hyades, suggesting they may share similar origins. Both clusters also contain red giants and white dwarfs, which represent later stages of stellar evolution, along with many main sequence stars.

Distance to M44 is often cited to be between 160 and 187 parsecs (520–610 light years), but the revised Hipparcos parallaxes (2009) for Praesepe members and the latest infrared color-magnitude diagram favors an analogous distance of 182 pc. There are better age estimates of around 600 million years (compared to about 625 million years for the Hyades). The diameter of the bright inner cluster core is about 7.0 parsecs (23 light years).

Its name comes from the fact that ancient Greeks and Romans saw this object as a manger from which two donkeys, the adjacent stars Asellus Borealis and Asellus Australis, are eating; these are the donkeys that Dionysos and Silenus rode into battle against the Titans.

Like many star clusters of all kinds, Praesepe has experienced "mass segregation". This means that bright massive stars are concentrated in the cluster's core, while dimmer and less massive stars populate its halo (sometimes called the corona). The cluster's core radius is estimated at 3.5 parsecs (11.4 light years); its half-mass radius is about 3.9 parsecs (12.7 light years); and its tidal radius is about 12 parsecs (39 light years). However, the tidal radius also includes many stars that are merely "passing through" and not bona fide cluster members.
(Excerpted from Wikipedia)

M44 and the Local Bubble

M44 distance (500 ly) seems to me compatible with the hypothesis that it may lay on the external interface of the so called Local Bubble, a relative void area created by a supernova explosion 10-20 M years ago, and in which the Sun entered with its proper motion. The sun is currently just in the center of the local bubble that has a radius of 1000 ly. This is just my personal idea, your remarks are welcome.
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