List of globular clusters

Image taken by ESO's VISTA of the Globular Cluster VVV CL001. On the right lies the globular star cluster UKS 1 and on the left lies a much less conspicuous new discovery, VVV CL001.[1]

This is a list of globular clusters. The apparent magnitude does not include an extinction correction.

Milky Way

These are globular clusters within the halo of the Milky Way galaxy. The diameter is in minutes of arc as seen from Earth. For reference, the J2000 epoch celestial coordinates of the Galactic Center are R.A.17h 45m 40.04s, Dec. −29° 00 28.1. A high proportion of globular clusters are located in the Ophiuchus and Sagittarius constellations, both of which lie in the direction of the galactic core.

Identifier Epoch J2000 Constellation Apparent
Magnitude
Diameter
()
Right ascension Declination
Omega Centauri 13h 26m 47.24s −47° 28 46.5 Centaurus 3.68 55
47 Tucanae 00h 24m 05.67s −72° 04 52.6 Tucana 3.95 50
M2 21h 33m 28.01s −00° 49 23.4 Aquarius 6.47 16
M3 13h 42m 11.62s +28° 22 38.2 Canes Venatici 6.19 18
M4 16h 23m 35.36s −26° 31 32.7 Scorpius 5.63 36
M5 15h 18m 33.51s +02° 04 54.9 Serpens 5.65 21.6
M9 17h 19m 11.53s −18° 30 58.2 Ophiuchus 7.72 12
M10 16h 57m 09.03s −04° 06 00.6 Ophiuchus 6.60 20
M12 16h 47m 14.18s −01° 56 54.7 Ophiuchus 6.70 16
M13 16h 41m 41.37s +36° 27 36.2 Hercules 5.78 20
M14 17h 37m 36.10s −03° 14 45.3 Ophiuchus 7.59 11
M15 21h 29m 58.33s +12° 10 01.1 Pegasus 6.20 18
M19 17h 02m 37.80s −26° 16 04.7 Ophiuchus 6.77 17
M22 18h 36m 23.97s −23° 54 14.5 Sagittarius 5.10 32
M28 18h 24m 32.81s −24° 52 11.2 Sagittarius 6.79 11.2
M30 21h 40m 22.12s −23° 10 47.5 Capricornus 7.19 12
M53 13h 12m 55.07s +18° 10 05.4 Coma Berenices 7.61 13
M55 19h 39m 59.71s −30° 57 53.1 Sagittarius 6.32 19
M56 19h 16m 35.57s +30° 11 00.5 Lyra 8.27 8.8
M62 17h 01m 12.80s −30° 06 49.4 Ophiuchus 6.45 15
M68 12h 39m 27.99s −26° 44 38.6 Hydra 7.84 11
M69 18h 31m 23.10s −32° 20 53.1 Sagittarius 7.64 8.45
M70 18h 43m 12.76s −32° 17 31.6 Sagittarius 7.87 8
M71 19h 53m 46.49s +18° 46 45.1 Sagitta 8.19 7.2
M72 20h 53m 27.80s −12° 32 13.7 Aquarius 9.27 6.6
M75 20h 06m 04.75s −21° 55 16.2 Sagittarius 8.52 6.8
M79 05h 24m 11.09s −24° 31 28.0 Lepus 7.73 9.6
M80 16h 17m 02.41s −22° 58 33.9 Scorpius 7.33 10
M92 17h 17m 07.35s +43° 08 09.4 Hercules 6.44 14
M107 16h 32m 31.86s −13° 03 13.3 Ophiuchus 7.93 13
NGC 288 00h 52m 46.37s −26° 34 58.7 Sculptor 8.09 13
NGC 362 01h 03m 14.26s −70° 50 55.6 Tucana 6.40 14
NGC 1261 03h 12m 16.21s −55° 12 59.2 Horologium 8.29 6.85
NGC 1851 05h 14m 06.53s −40° 02 48.8 Columba 7.14 12
NGC 2298 06h 48m 59.41s −36° 00 19.1 Puppis 9.29 5
NGC 2419 07h 38m 08.47s +38° 52 56.8 Lynx 10.4 4.6
NGC 2808 09h 12m 03.05s −64° 51 48.6 Carina 6.20 14
NGC 3201 10h 17m 36.82s −46° 24 44.9 Vela 6.75 20
NGC 4147 12h 10m 06.30s +18° 32 33.5 Coma Berenices 10.32 4.4
NGC 4372 12h 25m 45.40s −72° 39 32.7 Musca 7.24 5
NGC 4833 12h 59m 34.46s −70° 52 32.2 Musca 6.91 14
NGC 5053 13h 16m 27.09s +17° 42 00.5 Coma Berenices 9.47 10
NGC 5286 13h 46m 26.81s −51° 22 25.7 Centaurus 7.34 11
NGC 5466 14h 05m 27.29s +28° 32 04.0 Boötes 9.04 9
NGC 5634 14h 29m 37.23s −05° 58 35.1 Virgo 9.47 5.5
NGC 5694 14h 39m 36.29s −26° 32 20.2 Hydra 10.17 4.3
NGC 5824 15h 03m 58.63s –33° 04 04.8 Lupus 9.09 7.2
NGC 5897 15h 17m 24.50s –21° 00 37.0 Libra 8.53 11
NGC 5927 15h 28m 00.69s –50° 40 22.5 Lupus 8.01 6
NGC 5946 15h 35m 28.52s –50° 39 34.8 Norma 9.61 3
NGC 5986 15h 46m 03.25s –37° 47 10.6 Lupus 7.52 9.7
NGC 6101 16h 25m 48.12s –72° 12 06.9 Apus 9.16 5
NGC 6144 16h 27m 13.86s –26° 01 24.6 Scorpius 9.01 7.4
NGC 6139 16h 27m 40.37s −38° 50 55.7 Scorpius 8.99 8.1
NGC 6229 16h 46m 58.84s +47° 31 39.9 Hercules 9.39 4.5
NGC 6235 16h 53m 25.31s −22° 10 38.8 Ophiuchus 9.97 5
NGC 6256 16h 59m 32.62s −37° 07 17.0 Scorpius 11.29 4.1
NGC 6284 17h 04m 28.65s −24° 45 53.5 Ophiuchus 8.83 6.1
NGC 6287 17h 05m 09.13s −22° 42 29.6 Ophiuchus 9.35 4.9
NGC 6293 17h 10m 10.20s −26° 34 55.5 Ophiuchus 8.22 8.1
NGC 6304 17h 14m 32.25s −29° 27 43.7 Ophiuchus 8.22 8
NGC 6316 17h 16m 37.30s −28° 08 24.2 Ophiuchus 8.43 5.2
NGC 6325 17h 17m 59.21s −23° 45 57.6 Ophiuchus 10.33 4.1
NGC 6342 17h 21m 10.08s −19° 35 14.4 Ophiuchus 9.66 4.2
NGC 6356 17h 23m 34.96s −17° 48 47.0 Ophiuchus 8.25 10
NGC 6355 17h 23m 58.60s −26° 21 12.3 Ophiuchus 9.14 4.2
NGC 6352 17h 25m 29.11s −48° 25 19.8 Ara 7.96 9
NGC 6362 17h 31m 54.99s −67° 02 54.0 Ara 7.73 15
NGC 6366 17h 27m 44.24s −05° 04 47.5 Ophiuchus 9.20 13
NGC 6380 17h 34m 28.00s −39° 04 09.0 Scorpius 11.31 3.6
NGC 6388 17h 36m 17.23s −44° 44 06.9 Scorpius 6.72 10.2
NGC 6397 17h 40m 42.04s −53° 40 26.3 Ara 5.73 31
NGC 6401 17h 38m 36.60s −23° 54 34.2 Ophiuchus 9.45 4.9
NGC 6426 17h 44m 54.65s +03° 10 12.5 Ophiuchus 11.01 4.2
NGC 6440 17h 48m 52.70s −20° 21 36.9 Sagittarius 9.2 4.4
NGC 6441 17h 50m 13.03s −37° 03 04.6 Scorpius 7.15 9.6
NGC 6453 17h 50m 51.70s −34° 35 57.0 Scorpius 10.08 7.6
NGC 6496 17h 59m 02.84s −44° 15 57.4 Scorpius 8.54 5.8
NGC 6517 18h 01m 50.52s −08° 57 31.6 Ophiuchus 10.23 4
NGC 6522 18h 03m 34.02s −30° 02 02.1 Sagittarius 8.27 9.2
NGC 6528 18h 04m 49.64s −30° 03 21.8 Sagittarius 9.60 5
NGC 6535 18h 03m 50.51s −00° 17 51.5 Serpens 10.47 3.4
NGC 6539 18h 04m 49.68s −07° 35 09.0 Serpens 9.33 7.9
NGC 6540 18h 06m 08.60s −27° 45 55.0 Sagittarius 9.30 1.5
NGC 6541 18h 08m 02.28s −43° 42 53.6 Corona Australis 6.30 15
NGC 6544 18h 07m 20.58s −24° 59 50.7 Sagittarius 7.77 9.1
NGC 6553 18h 09m 17.60s −25° 54 31.3 Sagittarius 8.06 9.1
NGC 6558 18h 10m 17.80s −31° 45 50.0 Sagittarius 9.26 4.1
NGC 6569 18h 13m 38.80s −31° 49 36.8 Sagittarius 8.55 6.2
NGC 6584 18h 18m 37.60s −52° 12 56.8 Telescopium 8.27 6.8
NGC 6624 18h 23m 40.51s −30° 21 39.9 Sagittarius 7.87 8.8
NGC 6638 18h 30m 56.10s −25° 29 50.9 Sagittarius 9.02 7.15
NGC 6642 18h 31m 54.10s −23° 28 32.8 Sagittarius 9.13 5.8
NGC 6652 18h 35m 45.66s −32° 59 25.8 Sagittarius 8.62 6
NGC 6712 18h 53m 04.30s −08° 42 22.0 Scutum 8.10 9.8
NGC 6717 18h 55m 06.04s −22° 42 04.1 Sagittarius 9.28 5.2
NGC 6723 18h 59m 33.15s −36° 37 56.1 Sagittarius 7.01 13
NGC 6749 19h 05m 15.30s +01° 54 03.0 Aquila 12.44 4
NGC 6752 19h 10m 52.11s −59° 59 02.2 Pavo 5.40 29
NGC 6760 19h 11m 12.01s +01° 01 49.8 Aquila 8.88 9.6
NGC 6934 20h 34m 11.49s +07° 24 15.5 Delphinus 8.83 7.05
NGC 7006 21h 01m 29.38s +16° 11 14.1 Delphinus 10.56 3.6
NGC 7492 23h 08m 26.63s −15° 36 41.4 Aquarius 11.29 4.2
2MASS-GC01 18h 08m 21.81s –19° 49 47.0 Sagittarius 27.74 3.3
Arp-Madore 1 03h 55m 02.30s −49° 36 55.0 Horologium 15.72 0.5
Arp-Madore 2 07h 39m 11.10s −33° 50 57.0 Puppis unknown unknown
Arp-Madore 4 13h 56m 21.70s −27° 10 03.0 Hydra 15.89 3
Djorgovski 1 17h 47m 28.30s –33° 03 56.0 Scorpius 13.6 2
ESO 224-8 15h 39m 07.45s –50° 03 09.8 Norma 14 3
ESO 452-SC 11 16h 39m 25.45s –28° 23 55.3 Scorpius 12 1.2
ESO 456-78 18h 14m 06.60s –28° 38 06.0 Sagittarius 11 1.3
Koposov 1 11h 59m 18.50s +12° 15 36.0 Virgo 14.2 unknown
Koposov 2 07h 58m 17.00s +26° 15 18.0 Gemini 17.6 unknown
Laevens 1 11h 36m 16.2s −10° 52 38.8 Crater 0.47
Liller 1 17h 33m 24.50s −33° 23 20.4 Scorpius 16.77 6.8
Mercer 3 18h 18m 30.50s −16° 58 38.0 Sagittarius unknown unknown
Palomar 1 03h 33m 20.04s +79° 34 51.8 Cepheus 13.18 2.8
Palomar 2 04h 46m 05.91s +31° 22 53.4 Auriga 13.04 2.2
Palomar 3 10h 05m 31.90s +00° 04 18.0 Sextans 14.26 1.6
Palomar 4 11h 29m 16.80s +28° 58 24.9 Ursa Major 15.65 1.3
Palomar 5 15h 16m 05.25s +00° 06 41.8 Serpens 11.75 8.0
Palomar 6 17h 43m 42.20s −26° 13 21.0 Ophiuchus 11.55 1.2
Palomar 8 18h 41m 29.90s −19° 49 33.0 Sagittarius 11.02 5.2
Palomar 10 19h 18m 02.10s +18° 34 18.0 Sagitta 13.22 4.0
Palomar 11 19h 45m 14.40s −08° 00 26.0 Aquila 9.80 10.0
Palomar 13 23h 06m 44.44s +12° 46 19.2 Pegasus 13.47 0.7
GCl 38 16h 11m 00.60s +14° 57 28.0 Hercules 14.74 2.2
GCl 50 16h 59m 51.00s −00° 32 20.0 Ophiuchus 14.00 3.0
PWM 2 17h 58m 40.00s −05° 04 30.0 Ophiuchus unknown 2.5
Pyxis globular cluster 09h 07m 57.80s −37° 13 17.0 Pyxis 12.9 4.0
Reticulum globular cluster 04h 36m 11.30s −58° 51 48.0 Reticulum unknown unknown
Ruprecht 106 12h 38m 40.20s −51° 09 01.0 Centaurus 10.9 2
Segue 3 21h 21m 31s 19° 07 02 Pegasus 14.9 1.3
Terzan 1 17h 35m 47.80s –30° 28 11.0 Scorpius 15.9 2.4
Terzan 2 17h 27m 33.10s –30° 48 08.4 Scorpius 14.29 0.6
Terzan 3 16h 28m 40.08s –35° 21 12.5 Scorpius 12 3
Terzan 4 17h 30m 39.00s –31° 35 43.9 Scorpius 16 0.7
Terzan 5 17h 48m 04.80s –24° 46 45.0 Sagittarius 13.85 2.4
Terzan 6 17h 50m 46.38s –31° 16 31.4 Scorpius 13.85 1.4
Terzan 9 18h 01m 38.80s –26° 50 23.0 Sagittarius 16 0.2
Terzan 10 18h 03m 36.40s –26° 04 21.0 Sagittarius 14.9 1.5
Terzan 11 18h 12m 15.80s –22° 44 31.0 Sagittarius 15.63 1
Tonantzintla 2 17h 36m 10.50s –38° 33 12.0 Scorpius 12.24 2.2
UKS 1 17h 54m 27.20s –24° 08 43.0 Sagittarius 17.29 2
Willman 1 10h 49m 24.00s +51° 03 00.0 Ursa Major unknown 7

Local Group

Identifier Epoch J2000 Apparent
Magnitude
Diameter
()
Galaxy
Right ascension Declination
M54 18h 55m 03.33s −30° 28 47.5 7.60 12 Sag DEG
Arp 2 19h 28m 44.11s −30° 21 20.3 12.30 2.3 Sag DEG
Terzan 7 19h 17m 43.92s −34° 39 27.8 12.00 1.2 Sag DEG
Terzan 8 19h 41m 44.41s −33° 59 58.1 12.40 3.50 Sag DEG
Palomar 12 21h 46m 38.84s −21° 15 09.4 11.99 2.9 Sag DEG
Whiting 1 02h 02m 57.00s −03° 15 10.0 15.03 1.2 Sag DEG
NGC 1818 05h 04m 13.8s −66° 26 02 9.7 3.4 LMC
NGC 1846 05h 07m 34.9s −67° 27 32.5 11.5 3.8 LMC
NGC 1854 05h 09m 20.1s −68° 50 52.8 10.4 2.3 LMC
NGC 1868 05h 14m 36s −63° 57 18 11.6 3.9 LMC
NGC 121 00h 26m 48.25s −71° 32 8.4 11.24 3.1 SMC
NGC 1049 02h 39m 52.5s −34° 16 08 12.9 0.40 Fornax Dwarf
Mayall II 00h 32m 46.51s 39° 34 39.7 13.7 0.17 Andromeda
GALEXASC J003819.45+414713.7 00h 38m 19.5s 41° 47 15 ~17-18 0.033 Andromeda?

References

  1. "VISTA view of the newly discovered globular cluster VVV CL001 and its brighter companion". ESO Photo Release. ESO. Retrieved 21 October 2011.
  • William E. Harris (1996). "A Catalog of Parameters for Globular Clusters in the Milky Way". The Astronomical Journal. 112: 1487. Bibcode:1996AJ....112.1487H. doi:10.1086/118116.
  • Galactic Globular Clusters Database, from Marco Castellani (Astronomical Observatory of Rome, Italy)
  • VizieR VII/202 - Globular Clusters in the Milky Way (Harris, 1997)
  • An Atlas of the Universe, Richard Powell
  • ARVAL Catalog of Bright Globular Clusters, Andrés Valencia and Arnaldo Arnal
  • Milky Way Globular Clusters , Students for the Exploration and Development of Space
  • Djorgovski, S., and Meylan, G. 1993, in "Structure and Dynamics of Globular Clusters", ASP Conf. Ser. vol. 50, p. 325
  • LMC Clusters database, University of Cambridge.
  • J. Boyles; et al. (2011). "Young radio pulsars in galactic globular clusters". The Astrophysical Journal. 742: 51. arXiv:1108.4402. Bibcode:2011ApJ...742...51B. doi:10.1088/0004-637X/742/1/51.
  • Catalog of Variable Stars in Galactic Globular Clusters, Christine Clement, University of Toronto.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.