Celestial hemisphere:  Southern  ·  Constellation: Canis Major (CMa)  ·  Contains:  30 tau CMa  ·  NGC 2362  ·  The star τCMa
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NGC 2362, 



    
        

            Gary Imm
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NGC 2362

Getting plate-solving status, please wait...
NGC 2362, 



    
        

            Gary Imm
Powered byPixInsight

NGC 2362

Acquisition details

Dates:
Jan. 3, 2018
Frames:
Astrodon Gen2 I-Series Tru-Balance Blue: 50×10(8′ 20″) (gain: 139.00) -20°C bin 1×1
Astrodon Gen2 I-Series Tru-Balance Green: 50×10(8′ 20″) (gain: 139.00) -20°C bin 1×1
Astrodon Gen2 I-Series Tru-Balance Red: 50×10(8′ 20″) (gain: 139.00) -20°C bin 1×1
Integration:
25′
Avg. Moon age:
16.38 days
Avg. Moon phase:
97.08%

RA center: 07h18m43s.172

DEC center: -24°5717.73

Pixel scale: 0.852 arcsec/pixel

Orientation: 91.422 degrees

Field radius: 0.470 degrees

More info:Open 

Resolution: 3188x2364

File size: 3.5 MB

Locations: Backyard (Mag 20.8 - Bortle 4.5), Onalaska, Texas, United States

Data source: Backyard

Description

This object is an open cluster of about 60 stars located 5000 light years away in the constellation of Canis Major. This is one of my favorite clusters. I like it because of the contrast in brightness between the bright star (Tau Canis Majoris, the namesake of the cluster and the only one to have evolved away from the main sequence), and the other still bright but relatively dimmer stars around it. There is no doubt that it is a cluster, in how it stands out from the surrounding sky. It is estimated to be one of the youngest star clusters known.

This was a tough one to process because of the bright star artifacts that always result from using my ZWO camera.

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