These are deep sky targets seen from Caltech 7-10PM Local in January.
Object | Alternative Names | Type | Brightness | Surface Brightness | Size | Suggested Telescope/Eyepiece | Notes | Links for More Information |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pleiades | M45, Subaru | open cluster | 1.6 | 11.1 | 110' | >= 8" with 32mm+ eyepiece | 100 Myr-old star cluster, 440 lyr away, containing ~500 members total. | Astropixels![]() ![]() ![]() |
Orion Nebula | M42 | emission nebula | 4.0 | 13.1 | 85' x 60' | >= 8" with 32mm+ eyepiece | Bright emission nebula inside the nearest star-forming region. The four 1 Myr-old "Trapezium" stars at the heart are responsible for ionizing the surrounding gas and making it glow. 1.3 klyr away. | X |
Andromeda Galaxy | M31 | Spiral galaxy | 3.4 | X | 178'x63' | >= 10" | Can only see core in telescope, appears as faint, white cloud. 2.5 Mlyr distant. Similar in mass and luminosity to Milky Way. Moving toward us at 70miles/s; Collision expected in 2.5 Gyr | |
Christmas Tree Cluster | NGC 2264, Cone Nebula | Open Cluster | 3.9 | X | 20' | >= 8" | Young star cluster embedded in faint emission nebula; 2.6 klyr away, ~3 Myr old; brightest member is a binary O star | |
Double Cluster | NGC869 + NGC884 | Open Cluster | 4 | X | 60' | >= 10" | Two bright, resolved star clusters side by side. Need wide FOV. Both are young clusters, 7 klyr away, ~14 Myr old, containing luminous B stars | |
Owl Cluster | ET Cluster, NGC457 | Open Cluster | 6 | X | 13' | >= 8" | 10 klyr distant cluster shaped like a bird with wings, with two bright stars for eyes. Brightest of "eyes" is foreground star, dimmer is a cluster member | |
Almach | Gamma Andromedae | Double Star | 2.3 and 5.1 | X | 10" apart | >= 6" | Often considered the most beautiful high color contrast double star visible. 350 lyrs away. Redder and brighter star is a K giant, secondary star is itself an unresolved triple star system with A and B dwarfs. |