The Coronet Cluster, also known as the R CrA cluster after its best-known member, is a small open cluster located about 170 parsecs away in the southern constellation Corona Australis, isolated at the edge of the Gould Belt.[1][2] The Coronet Cluster is 3.5 times closer to the Earth than the Orion Nebula Cluster.[3] The cluster center is composed of mostly young stars.[4] The variable T Coronae Australis is also a member, only one arc minute from R CrA.
Coronet Cluster | |
---|---|
Observation data (J2000.0 epoch) | |
Right ascension | 19h 1m 54s |
Declination | −36° 57.2′ |
Distance | 420–550 ly (130–170 pc) |
Apparent magnitude (V) | 8 |
Apparent dimensions (V) | 26 arcmin |
Physical characteristics | |
Mass | unknown M☉ |
Radius | 2.1 light years |
Estimated age | 0.5–2 million years |
relative scarcity of circumstellar discs | |
Other designations | R CRA, G359.93-17.85 by BDB2003 catalog |
Associations | |
Constellation | Corona Australis |
References
edit- ^ "APOD - Coronet in the Southern Crown". Retrieved 2016-12-30.
- ^ Sicilia-Aguilar, Aurora; Henning, Thomas; Juha´sz, Attila; Bouwman, Jeroen; Garmire, Gordon; Garmire, Audrey (10 November 2008). "Very Low Mass Objects in the Coronet Cluster: The Realm of the Transition Disks" (PDF). The Astrophysical Journal. 687 (2): 1145–1167. arXiv:0807.2504. Bibcode:2008ApJ...687.1145S. doi:10.1086/591932. S2CID 119208696.
- ^ "Coronet Cluster: A Neighbor of Star Formation (A region of star formation about 420 light years from Earth.)". Archived from the original on 17 February 2013. Retrieved 10 Jan 2013.
- ^ Sicilia-Aguilar, Aurora; Henning, Thomas; Linz, Hendrik; Krause, Oliver; André, Philippe (2012). "The star formation and disk evolution history of a sparse region: The Coronet cluster". Proceedings of the Symposium "From Atoms to Pebbles: Herschel's View of Star and Planet Formation": 29. Bibcode:2012faph.confE..29S.
External links
edit- Media related to Coronet Cluster at Wikimedia Commons