Celestial hemisphere:  Northern  ·  Constellation: Delphinus (Del)  ·  Contains:  HD196025  ·  HD196245  ·  NGC 6934
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Caldwell 47 (NGC6934) from a distance, Joe Matthews
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Caldwell 47 (NGC6934) from a distance

Revision title: Caldwell 47 cropped

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Caldwell 47 (NGC6934) from a distance, Joe Matthews
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Caldwell 47 (NGC6934) from a distance

Revision title: Caldwell 47 cropped

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The. last of our stretch of clear nights 2023/10/04 and I am tired from the previous nights of staying up.  I planned to stop at midnight but goofed around trying to capture stopped after trying to capture Jupiter, what would have been my first planetary video attempt.  It failed so I just decided to call it a night.

Caldwell 47 is about 50,000 light-years away from Earth, but the combined light of its many thousands of stars calls our attention from halfway across the galaxy.  Hubble's Advanced Camera for Surveys imaged the cluster here in visible and infrared light, which combines the type of light that we can see (visible) with a kind that can peer through clouds of dust (infrared). Hubble’s observations presented astronomers the opportunity to study some of Caldwell 47’s strangest stellar members — blue stragglers.Blue straggler stars are so named because they seem to lag behind in the aging process, appearing younger than the rest of the stars they formed with. Astronomers think that blue stragglers might emerge from binary systems — pairs of stars that orbit each other. One possible scenario is when the more massive star of the pair evolves and expands, the smaller star steals material away from its companion. This stirs up hydrogen fuel and causes the growing star to undergo nuclear fusion at a faster rate. It burns hotter and bluer, like a massive young star.Caldwell 47 was first spied by British astronomer William Herschel in 1785, though he originally thought it was a nebula. Also cataloged as NGC 6934, it is found in the Delphinus constellation and is best viewed in summer night skies in the Northern Hemisphere, or winter skies in the Southern Hemisphere. With a magnitude of 8.8, the cluster can be seen in binoculars, but it will likely appear to be a single star. Through a moderate or large telescope, individual stars can be picked out at the edges of the cluster, with the central region remaining an unresolved haze of stars.

Image and information from.
@https://science.nasa.gov/mission/hubble/science/explore-the-night-sky/hubble-caldwell-catalog/caldwell-47

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Title: Caldwell 47 cropped

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Caldwell 47 (NGC6934) from a distance, Joe Matthews