The Pleiades, or Seven Sisters (M45), are a nearby young galactic cluster, the stars of which are embedded in nebulosity shining by light reflected from microscopic solid dust particles. This type of nebulae are called "reflection nebulae". They appear blue on photographs, the color derived from the young hot stars providing the light. Their spectra are exact copies of the spectra of the stars illuminating them. The complexity of the Pleiades nebulae, which was already hinted at by several mid-19th-century observers, was fully revealed by the first astro cameras, e.g. by that of the brothers Henry in Paris and Isaac Roberts in England, between 1885 and 1888. The largest piece of nebulosity, the so-called Merope Nebula, extends to the south of the star Merope (at the lower left of the image above). The dust particles forming this remarkable nebulosity are part of an interstellar molecular cloud, which currently happens to be crossed by the Pleiades star cluster. This is not material of which the cluster was formed.
The distance of the Pleiades cluster has been newly determined by direct parallax measures by ESA's astrometric satellite Hipparcos; according to these measurement, the Pleiades are at a distance of 380 light years (previously, a value of 408 light years had been assumed). The age of the Pleiades star cluster amounts to about 100 million years.
Modern observing methods have revealed that at least about 500 mostly faint stars belong to the Pleiades star cluster, spread over a 2 degree (four times the diameter of the Moon) field. Their density is pretty low, compared to other open clusters.
M45 - The Pleiades, Wright-Newtonian photograph.
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