Messier 21 Explained

Messier 21
Credit:John Saunders
Epoch:J2000.0
Class:I,3,m
Dist Ly:1205pc
Appmag V:6.5[1]
Mass Msol:783.4
Radius Ly:3.6pc
Names:M21, NGC 6531, Cr 363, OCl 26.0

Messier 21 or M21, also designated NGC 6531 or Webb's Cross, is an open cluster of stars located to the north-east of Sagittarius in the night sky, close to the Messier objects M20 to M25 (except M24). It was discovered and catalogued by Charles Messier on June 5, 1764. This cluster is relatively young and tightly packed. A few blue giant stars have been identified in the cluster, but Messier 21 is composed mainly of small dim stars. With a magnitude of 6.5, M21 is not visible to the naked eye; however, with the smallest binoculars it can be easily spotted on a dark night. The cluster is positioned near the Trifid nebula (NGC 6514), but is not associated with that nebulosity. It forms part of the Sagittarius OB1 association.

This cluster is located away from Earth with an extinction of 0.87. Messier 21 is around 6.6 million years old with a mass of . It has a tidal radius of 11.7 pc, with a nucleus radius of and a coronal radius of . There are at least members within the coronal radius down to visual magnitude 15.5, including many early B-type stars. An estimated 40–60 of the observed low-mass members are expected to be pre-main-sequence stars, with 26 candidates identified based upon hydrogen alpha emission and the presence of lithium in the spectrum. The stars in the cluster do not show a significant spread in ages, suggesting that the star formation was triggered all at once.

As of January 2022, Messier 21 is one of the few remaining objects within the Messier Catalog to not have been photographed by the Hubble Space Telescope.[2]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Messier 21 . 21 July 2024 . SEDS Messier Catalog.
  2. Web site: Explore - the Night Sky | Hubble's Messier Catalog. 28 August 2017.