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NGC 1783, John Bozeman

NGC 1783

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NGC 1783, John Bozeman

NGC 1783

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Description

NGC 1783 (also known as ESO 85-SC29) is a globular cluster within the Dorado constellation and part of the Large Magellanic Cloud, a satellite dwarf galaxy of the Milky Way. At an aperture of 50 arcseconds, its apparent V-band magnitude is 10.39, making it one of the brightest globular clusters in the LMC as viewed from Earth. It was discovered in 1835 by John Herschel. The compiler of the New General Catalogue, John Louis Emil Dreyer, described this cluster as "considerably bright, large, round, very gradually pretty much brighter middle, mottled but not resolved." NGC 1783 is about 1.7 billion years old. Its estimated mass is 9.8×104 M☉, and its total luminosity is 3.77×105 L☉, leading to a mass-to-luminosity ratio of 0.26 M☉/L☉. All else equal, older star clusters have higher mass-to-luminosity ratios; that is, they have lower luminosities for the same mass.

Data from the Hubble Space Telescope MAST Pipeline. Release date: 2007-01-14

Camera: ACS

Color Mapped:

Red-F814W
Green-F555W
Blue-F435W

Processed with FITS Liberator, PixInsight and Photoshop 2023.

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NGC 1783, John Bozeman