Our final stop is the
open cluster Stock 2, reclining on the Cassiopeia-Perseus border, 4[degrees] east-southeast of NGC 663.
But the group is worth a closer look in any telescope, because it guards a well-kept secret off its eastern end: the small, faint
open cluster NGC 6802.
Kharchenko, Piskunov and Roeser place most of the stars within the radius of their
open cluster, COCD 1034 = ASCC 34 = [KPR2005] 34 and list the position of the magnitude 8 star HD 54779 as the cluster's centre (Webb Society journal 144).
Open clusters often take on a particular shape through the eyepiece that is not obvious in photographs or drawings, and this cluster has earned the moniker of the Owl Cluster--not just for the two bright stars that represent the owl's eyes, but for the other stars whose patterns form the body, the legs and the wings--or perhaps visual observers just have a very vivid imagination.
"Our galaxy contains more than 1,000 of these
open clusters, which potentially can present the physical conditions for harbouring many more of these giant planets," Perez said.
Binoculars show a small compact
open cluster with one reddish star.
IC 4756 is another
open cluster nearby that's also visible by naked eye under dark sky, and even bigger (although a little sparser) than NGC 6633 next door.
Snugly protected by the Scutum shield, and approximately 1.50 north-east of the
open cluster NGC 6631, is the diffuse nebula IC 1287.
In fact Cancer is unusual in that its brightest deep sky object, the
open cluster M44, has an integrated magnitude that is brighter than any of the stars within the constellation, and often M44 is the only part of Cancer that can be seen with the naked eye.
Now let's sweep over to another
open cluster, M23, which can fit in a binocular field of view with the star marked Mu ([mu]) on our chart.