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NGC 2112
OPEN CLUSTER IN ORION (THE HUNTER)
(ra: 05h 53' 09"/ dec 00º 24')
COLLABORATION WITH EZEQUIEL BELLOCCHIO
CLICK THE IMAGE FOR A HIGH RESOLUTION VIEW
December 2025, Observatorio Cielos Albertnos, Buenos Aires, Argentina
DATA
TYPE: Open Cluster
Visual Brightness: 9.1
APPARENT DIAMETER: 18 arc minutes
DISTANCE: 2770 light years
IMAGE INFORMATION
SCOPE: Askar SQA55 f4.8 Quintuplet Petzval
CAMERA: ZWO 2600 Color
MOUNT: ZWO AM5M
FILTERS: None
EXPOSURES: LRGB 6 HS (60 X 300 secs)
SKY CONDITIONS: bortle 3 skies
OBJECT DESCRIPTION AND IMAGE SESSION
NGC 2112 is an intermediate-age open cluster located in the constellation Orion, first discovered by William Herschel in 1786. Situated approximately 850 parsecs (2,770 light-years) away, it has a visual magnitude of 9.1, making it visible with binoculars or small telescopes. It is characterized as a moderately concentrated cluster containing roughly 50 to 100 stars. The reddish glow seen in the background in this image ionized Hydrogen gas. This gas is pat of a larger structure known as Barnard's Loop. NGC 2112's age is estimated at about 2 billion years. Observations of NGC 2112 have also led to the discovery of brown dwarfs, which are objects that are too massive to be considered planets but not massive enough to undergo sustained hydrogen fusion in their cores like stars. In 2000, a team of astronomers discovered four brown dwarf candidates in the cluster using deep infrared imaging.
This image is a crop of a larger filed of view that covers 5 degress incluiding barnard loop Messier 78 and LDN 1622 acquired by Ezequiel Bellocchio