Astronomy

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although it’s likely the dense
clouds of Sagittarius hide a few
dozen more.
While the best and the
brightest globular clusters
appear more prominently
in the summer sky, our focus
will be on those often over-
looked specimens best viewed
during the rest of the year.
We will survey both Messier
and NGC objects, all discov-
ered by the 1800s and all
visible through backyard
telescopes.

Autumn
As the more sparsely populated
fall sky replaces the jeweled
treasures of summer, the num-
ber of globular clusters dimin-
ishes. The two premier exam-
ples are M2 in Aquarius and
M15 in Pegasus. Elsewhere, we
find a sprinkle of other Messier
globulars. Greater challenges
loom with a handful of NGC
globular clusters scattered over
this season’s sky.

Let’s start our tour with a
bonus object, in the eastern
corridor of Sagittarius. In an
overlooked corner of this con-
stellation, away from the bright
star clouds and nebulae associ-
ated with summer, is M75.
Within the reach of all but the
smallest telescopes, it’s fairly
tight and consequently not
resolvable into individual stars.
It more or less typifies the pro-
file of an off-season globular.
Not so for M2 and M15,
which are separated by about
13° nearly due north and south.
Through a 6-inch telescope,
both show as concentrated balls
of stars, although M15 is a bit
looser and consequently easier
to resolve into stars inside
its edges. M15, the second-
brightest cluster in our survey,
is astrophysically noteworthy
for two reasons. First, it is one
of only four members of its
class known to host a planetary
nebula: 14th-magnitude Pease
1, discovered spectroscopically

bular clusters


THE GLOBULARS OF AUTUMN


OBJECT CON. R.A. DEC. MAG. SIZE
M2 Aquarius 21h34m –0°49' 6.6 12.9'
M15 Pe g a s u s 21h3 0 m 12 °10 ' 6. 3 12. 3 '
M75 Sagittarius 20h06m –21°55' 8.5 6'
M30 Capricornus 21h40m –23°11' 7.3 11'
M56 Lyra 19h17m 30°11' 8. 3 7.1'
M71 Sagitta 19h54m 18°47' 8.0 7.2'
M72 Aquarius 20h54m –2°32' 9.3 5.9'
NGC 6934 Delphinus 20h34m 7°24' 8.7 5.9'
NGC 7006 Delphinus 21h02m 16°11' 10.5 2.8'
NGC 1466 Hydrus 3h45m –71°40' 11.6 3.5'
NGC 1841 Mensa 4h45m –83°59' 11.4 0.9'
NGC 7492 Aquarius 23h08m –15°37' 11.2 6.2'
NGC 1049 Fornax 2h40m –34°15' 12.6 0.4'
NGC 288 Sculptor 0h53m –26°35' 8.1 13.8'
Key: Con. = Constellation; R.A. = Right ascension (2000.0); Dec. = Declination (2000.0);
Mag. = Magnitude

in 1927. Lost among thousands
of stellar pinpoints, it is next to
impossible to identify visually.
If Pease 1 is not enough of an
oddity, M15 is one of only a few
globular clusters that emit
X-rays. The X-ray radiation

undoubtedly results from stel-
lar material streaming from
one star of a pair onto the
superdense surface of its com-
panion (be it a neutron star or a
black hole), which no optical
telescope will reveal.

M15


KEN SIARKIEWICZ/ADAM BLOCK/NOAO/AURA/NSF
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