Coma Star Cluster
The Coma Star Cluster is a small but nearby open cluster located in the constellation Coma Berenices. The cluster contains about 40 brighter stars with a common proper motion. The brighter stars of the cluster make out a distinctive "V" shape as seen when Coma Berenices is rising. The cluster used to represent the tail of Leo. However, in around 240 BC, Ptolemy III renamed it for the Egyptian queen Berenice's legendary sacrifice of her hair.
The Hipparcos satellite and infrared color-magnitude diagram fitting have been used to establish a distance to the cluster's center of approximately. The distance established via the independent analyses agree, thereby making the cluster an important rung on the cosmic distance ladder. The open cluster is roughly twice as distant as the Hyades and covers an area of more than 7.5 degrees on the sky. The cluster is approximately 450 million years old.
Identifier | Magnitude |
γ Com | 4.81 |
12 Com | 4.81 |
31 Com | 4.94 |
14 Com | 4.95 |
16 Com | 4.96 |
13 Com | 5.18 |
17 Com | 5.24 |
21 Com | 5.44 |
18 Com | 5.47 |
HD 106887 | 5.71 |
HD 105805 | 5.99 |
8 Com | 6.22 |
22 Com | 6.24 |
FM Com | 6.43 |