The Toucan and the cluster

It may be famous for hosting spectacular sights such as the Tucana Dwarf Galaxy and 47 Tucanae (heic1510), the second brightest globular cluster in the night sky, but the southern constellation of Tucana (The Toucan) also possesses a variety of unsung cosmic beauties.

One such beauty is NGC 299, an open star cluster located within the Small Magellanic Cloud just under 200 000 light-years away. Open clusters such as this are collections of stars weakly bound by the shackles of gravity, all of which formed from the same massive molecular cloud of gas and dust. Because of this, all the stars have the same age and composition, but vary in their mass because they formed at different positions within the cloud.

This unique property not only ensures a spectacular sight when viewed through a sophisticated instrument attached to a telescope such as Hubble’s Advanced Camera for Surveys, but gives astronomers a cosmic laboratory in which to study the formation and evolution of stars — a process that is thought to depend strongly on a star’s mass.

Credit:

ESA/Hubble & NASA

About the Image

Id:potw1642a
Type:Observation
Release date:17 October 2016, 06:00
Size:2453 x 1807 px

About the Object

Name:NGC 299
Type:Milky Way : Star : Grouping : Cluster : Open
Distance:200000 light years
Constellation:Tucana
Category:Star Clusters

Image Formats

r.titleLarge JPEG
1.9 MB
r.titleScreensize JPEG
399.8 KB

Zoomable


Wallpapers

r.title1024x768
442.4 KB
r.title1280x1024
666.9 KB
r.title1600x1200
936.4 KB
r.title1920x1200
1.1 MB
r.title2048x1536
1.4 MB

Coordinates

Position (RA):0 53 24.35
Position (Dec):-72° 11' 49.67"
Field of view:2.04 x 1.51 arcminutes
Orientation:North is 29.1° left of vertical


Colours & filters

BandWavelengthTelescope
Optical
V
555 nm Hubble Space Telescope
ACS
Optical
V
555 nm Hubble Space Telescope
ACS
Infrared
I
814 nm Hubble Space Telescope
ACS
Infrared
I
814 nm Hubble Space Telescope
ACS

Also see our


Privacy policy Accelerated by CDN77