60 AUSTRALIAN SKY & TELESCOPE January 2018
MILKY WAY: JEREMY PEREZ; NGC 2360: JIM THOMMES
has as many descriptions as there are observers. I see a
spray of bright stars like a sheaf of grain, and in Deep-Sky
Companions: The Caldwell Objects, Stephen James O’Meara
compares it to a butterfly’s chrysalis. Have a look and see
what you think.
From NGC 2360, sweep north-northwest 5.5° to find a
nice pair of open clusters, NGC 2343 and NGC 2353, sitting
just over the border in the constellation Monoceros. Both are
embedded in a vaguely bat-shaped asterism of half a dozen
fifth- and sixth-magnitude stars. Those bright foreground
stars are O, B and K giants, ranging from 400 to 1,900 light-
years distant — practically next door in galactic terms. NGC
2343 and NGC 2353 are much farther out, at 3,400 light-
years, where our own Orion Spur points toward the Perseus
Arm of the Milky Way. NGC 2343 has a distinctive shape like
a miniature Hyades cluster, with the part of Aldebaran played
by the red giant star HD 54387.
Another 3° north-northwest of NGC 2343 lies M50.
Considered on its own, M50 is one of the lesser Messiers,
unlikely to make anyone’s list of favourites. But you really
have to work to consider M50 on its own, because this field
is so rich. Any 50- to 70-mm binocular will show M50 in
the same field with NGC 2343 and 2353, against a starfield
so dense that it’s hard to tell where the clusters end. The
question of which stars do and do not belong to these
clusters is a real problem for professional astronomers, but
for amateur stargazers it’s no problem at all. We only need to
look and enjoy.
Sweep about 10° west of M50 and you’ll find a triangle of
bright stars — Beta (β), Gamma (γ) and 7 Monocerotis. Beta
Monocerotis is a famous triple star, and well worth revisiting
at higher magnification, but it also forms a nice binocular
double with HD 45709, which lies 4′ to the northwest. At the
southern point of the triangle, 7 Monocerotis and HD 44178
make an even easier split, with a separation of 6.4′.
Nestled within this triangle you’ll find NGC 2215.
This cluster is probably the toughest catch so far on the tour.
I’ve spotted it through a 9×50 finder, but only under very
dark skies. Any instrument of 70 mm or larger should reel
it in, though, revealing between a dozen and 20 equally
bright members. Checking my logbook, I see that at different
times I’ve compared the curving star chains of NGC 2215
to a fleur-de-lis and, well, a pumpkin. The flower is a much
more elegant metaphor, so let’s go with that.
Two degrees north of Beta Monocerotis lies NGC 2232.
This cluster is one of my favourites. Anchored on 10
Monocerotis and with three lobes of bright stars spanning
almost 1°, it’s big and bright enough to have easily been a
Messier object, if only Messier had spotted it. The cluster’s
prominence is a function of its proximity — at only 1,300
light-years, it’s slightly closer to us than the Orion Nebula.
Our next ‘object’ has no name, but it may be the best view
in the entire tour. Five degrees north of NGC 2232, you’ll
find an arc of bright stars straddling the celestial equator.
NGC 2360
Summer Milky Way
(^1) Caroline Herschel discovered open cluster NGC 2360 in 1783 with
her “comet sweeper,” a small telescope with 14½× magnification with
a 3° 10 v field of view.
SWhen we look at the Milky Way during the summer months, we’re
looking away from the center of our galaxy, so it appears fainter than
it does in the winter in similarly dark conditions. Even so, it still holds
many spectacular deep sky objects.
BINOCULAR TOUR