NGC 3293
NGC 3293
NGC 3293 is a bright open cluster in the southern constellation Carina. NGC 3293 is also visible to the naked eye as a blurred star, less than two degrees northwest of the famous star η Carinae, in a star field that appears rich and with the bright trail of the Milky Way in the background; 10x50 binoculars reveal the main stars, which appear very concentrated. With an amateur telescope the object appears completely resolved into dozens of stars, but it is only in the long-exposure photos that the faint nebula to the north of the cluster is visible. Despite its brightness and ease of resolution, it often takes a back seat in amateur observations due to the presence of the large Carina Nebula, visible less than 1° to the southeast, and other objects, such as the Southern Pleiades and NGC 3532.
Its declination is strongly austral, making this cluster unobservable from many of the inhabited regions of the northern hemisphere, such as Europe and almost all of North America; From some inhabited regions of the Southern Hemisphere, on the contrary, it is circumpolar. The best time to observe it in the evening sky is between January and June.
Its declination is strongly austral, making this cluster unobservable from many of the inhabited regions of the northern hemisphere, such as Europe and almost all of North America; From some inhabited regions of the Southern Hemisphere, on the contrary, it is circumpolar. The best time to observe it in the evening sky is between January and June.
Telescope
CHI-1-CMOS
Camera
QHY 600M
Location
EL SAUCE OBSERVATORY, CHILE
Date of observation
18-07.2023
Filters
SHO
Processing
Pixinsight and Photoshop
Credits
Credit Sauro Gaudenzi / Data Telescope Live