Mornington Peninsula Astronomical Society     

dot

dot dot
dot
dot  
Home
Steve Mohr
Helmuth
Greg Walton
Peter Skilton
David Rolfe
David Stock
Alex Cherney
Richard Pollard

Latest Info
Click on the below links for an expanded view...

Sun Situation



 

CURRENT MOON

CLICK HERE - Viewing Situation
at the Briars Viewing
 

 

Jewel box

NGC4755 - Jewel box

The Jewel Box (also known as NGC 4755 or Kappa Crucis Cluster) is an open cluster in the Crux constellation. As Kappa Crucis, it has a Bayer designation despite the fact that it is a cluster rather than an individual star.

It was one of the finest open clusters discovered by Nicolas Louis de Lacaille when he was in South Africa during 1751–1752. This cluster is one of the youngest known, with an estimated age of only 7.1 million years. It has an apparent magnitude of 4.2, and is located 6,440 light years from Earth and contains around 100 stars.

This famous group of young bright stars was named the Jewel Box from its description by Sir John Herschel as 'a casket of variously coloured precious stones', which refers to its appearance in the telescope. The bright orange star is Kappa Crucis, and it contrasts strongly against its predominantly blue, hot companions. Kappa Crucis is a very large, (hence very luminous) quite young star in its red supergiant stage, which paradoxically indicates that its life is drawing to a close. The cluster looks like a star to the unaided eye and appears close to the eastern-most star of the Southern Cross (Beta Crucis), so is only visible from southern latitudes.
(From Wikipedia, the free encyclopaedia)

Information

bulletInstrument: W.O. FLT110
bulletMount: Vixen Porta-mount
bulletExposure: 1 x 10 Seconds
bulletCamera: Meade DSI2 Colour
bulletSensitivity: N/A
bulletDate: March 21, 2008
bulletExposure start: 10PM
bulletLocation: Bentleigh, Vic
bulletAutoguider: None
bulletEnhancement: None

Notes: Just playing around with someone else's gear, was happy with the red jewel

 
Up
Moon
Eta Carina
Jewel box
M16
M8 + M20
NGC2024
NGC1977
NGC253
NGC2070
M42
NGC4755
NGC1532
NGC2238
M104
M83
Helix
Veil
M16 in Narrowband

Public Viewing Nights 

Just to let everyone know, public viewing nights are held every first Friday of the month. Clear or cloudy nights the public viewing night goes ahead. Members man a number of telescopes of various sizes and types, and for those nights where the sky is cloudy, extended astronomical presentations are presented in the MPAS Viewing Centre.

So please come along and enjoy our nights sky.

How to get Here
(Click Here)

Where are visitors seeking from..

Locations of visitors to this page

 
dot
dot

dotBest Viewed in 1024

 

  This website is the ownership of the Mornington Peninsula Astronomical Society, the content is the intellectual property of the Society and is copyright.