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Pleiades

The Pleiades is an open cluster in the constellation of Taurus also known as Messier 45, or just M 45. This relatively nearby cluster (about 380 light years) is also known as the Seven Sisters although from cities only the five or six brightest stars are visible. From a dark site, ten or more are visible. The stars are surrounded by nebulosity, observable in photographs taken using long period exposures through telescopes with significant apertures. Due to the particular arrangement of the stars in the cluster and its compact appearance, it is often mistaken for the Little Dipper by those with little knowledge of astronomy.

 

Visible members of the Pleiades are luminous blue or white stars. The cluster contains hundreds of other stars too faint to be visible to the naked eye. This is a young cluster, with an estimated age of about 100 million years, and a projected life of only an additional 250 million years.


The Pleiades' high visibility in the night sky has guaranteed it a special place in cultures, antique and modern:

Each of the names is assigned to a single star in the cluster. They were mountain-nymphs (Oreads), the daughters of Atlas and Pleione, who are also represented by stars in the cluster; the granddaughters of Iapetus and Clymene, and the sisters of the Hyades, Calypso, and Dione. They committed suicide after the deaths of their sisters, the Hyades.
Alternatively, they were known as the Atlantides.
Pleiades Bright Stars
Name Number Mv Type Catalog
Alcyone eta (25) Tauri 2.86 B7e III vdB 23
Atlas 27 Tauri 3.62 B8 III Ced 190
Electra 17 Tauri 3.70 B6e III vdB 20
Maia 20 Tauri 3.86 B7 III NGC 1432
Merope 23 Tauri 4.17 B6 IV NGC 1435, IC 349
Taygeta 19 Tauri 4.29 B6 V Ced 19e
Pleione BU (28) Tauri 5.09 (var) B8e p Ced 19p
Celaeno 16 Tauri 5.44 B7 IV Ced 19c
Asterope 21 and 22 Tauri 5.64/6.41 B8e V/B9 V
Sterope 18 Tauri 5.65 B8 V Ced 19h
Name: common name
Number: astronomical designation
Mv: visual magnitude
Type: spectral type
Catalog: catalog number of associated nebulosity


See also: La Pléiade, a group of 16th-century French poets

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